Do fast-food chains cluster around schools?
Study shows most Chicago schools have a restaurant within a half mile
FREE VIDEO |
Fast food and schools Aug. 24: As one study shows obesity is on the rise, another study in Chicago finds that fast-food restaurants cluster around schools in the Chicago area. NBC's Carl Quintanilla reports. Today show |
Diet and fitness videos |
Fruit juice loaded with sugar, calories? Dec. 17: Is fruit juice loaded with too much sugar and calories to be considered healthy? Meredith Land reports. |
Smart Fitness — By Jacqueline Stenson |
6 gifts fit for the gym rat on your list Searching for a gift for the exercise enthusiast on your list? Whatever the sport or activity, we have ideas that are fun, functional and in a range of prices to help keep you fiscally fit. |
CHICAGO - The big Burger King sign across the street from a high school campus advertises this temptation: “2 Whoppers for $3.”
The scene is repeated throughout Chicago, where fast-food restaurants are clustered within easy walking distance of elementary and high schools, according to a study by Harvard’s School of Public Health. The researchers say the pattern probably exists in urban areas nationwide and is likely contributing to the nation’s obesity epidemic.
“It can be very hard for children and teens to eat in healthy ways when they’re inundated with this,” said lead author Bryn Austin, a researcher at Harvard and Children’s Hospital Boston.
Nearly 80 percent of Chicago schools studied had at least one fast-food restaurant within a half mile. Statistical mapping techniques showed there were at least three times more fast-food restaurants located less than a mile from schools than would be expected if the restaurants had been more randomly distributed, the researchers said.
Austin said Chicago was chosen because some of the researchers had previous expertise in the city, and she noted that Chicago has a diverse population that likely reflects what is happening in other urban areas.
Previous studies have shown that on a typical day, almost one-third of U.S. youngsters eat fast food, and that when they do, they consume more calories, fats and sugars and fewer fruits and vegetables than on days when they don’t eat fast food, the researchers said.
![]() |
M. Spencer Green / AP A Burger King restaurant is located across the street from the Orr High School campus in Chicago. Researchers in a study say the pattern of fast-food restaurants clustered within walking distance to schools is likely contributing to the nation's obesity epidemic. |
“We know that a great deal of thought and planning goes into fast-food restaurant site location,” and that children “are very important to the market,” Austin said.
McDonald’s Corp. spokesman Walt Riker said the fast-food giant locates its restaurants “in high-traffic areas like every other business, to serve customers. It has nothing to do with schools.” He called the study assumptions speculative since the researchers didn’t assess whether proximity of fast food affected students’ eating habits.
Burger King did not return several phone messages seeking comment.
The study was released Tuesday in the September issue of the American Journal of Public Health.
The researchers compiled 2002 data on 613 fast food restaurants and 1,292 public and private schools in Chicago. Sources included Technomic Inc., a food industry market research company that publishes a list of leading fast-food chains. Restaurants and schools for which addresses could not be found were excluded, but the researchers said the report includes at least 90 percent of both.
An estimated 16 percent or more than 9 million U.S. children aged 6 to 19 are seriously overweight or obese, numbers that have tripled since 1980.
Children in Chicago are more than twice as likely to be overweight when they enter kindergarten than children elsewhere, so the study is especially troubling, said Dr. Matt Longjohn, executive director of the Consortium to Lower Obesity in Chicago Children.
One solution is to “change demand” and make healthy food choices more accessible, Longjohn said.
Chicago’s public schools are among districts that have eliminated junk-food and soft drinks from campus vending machines in an effort to tackle the problem, but the researchers said the clustering of fast-food restaurants near schools may be undermining those efforts.
“We can’t really tell our students not to go to fast-food restaurants; all we can do is to educate them about what healthy food choices are,” said Mike Vaughn, a spokesman for Chicago’s public schools.
- Discuss Story On Newsvine
-
Rate Story:
View popularLowHigh - Instant Message
MORE FROM FITNESS |
| Add Fitness headlines to your news reader: |
Resource guide



