Is
a Restaurant a Diet Trap?
Eating Out at “Healthy” Restaurants Leads to Weight
Gain.
It’s hard to follow your healthful eating plan when you eat
away from home. But eating out is nearly inevitable. Since the obvious
way to cope is to make the best choices you can, you may choose
to dine at a “healthy” fast-food restaurant that promises
low-calorie meals.
And therein lies the problem.
Food psychologist Brian Wansink, PhD, author of Mindless Eating:
Why We Eat More Than We Think, is committed to research that helps
Americans understand the reasons they choose to eat certain foods,
and he’s just been given the perfect platform from which to
communicate his findings. He’s been appointed the executive
director of the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Center for
Nutrition Policy and Promotion, a position that makes him responsible
for developing of the new 2010 dietary guidelines for Americans
and sorting out the Food Guide Pyramid and other programs that don’t
seem to have made an impact.
Wansink, who confesses that he eats more fast food than he should,
states in the Journal of Consumer Research that he and his researchers
have uncovered an interesting mindset that most of us share.“We
found that when people go to restaurants claiming to be healthy,
such as Subway, they choose additional side items containing up
to 131 percent more calories than when they go to restaurants like
McDonald’s, that don’t make this claim.”
If you think you’re “eating healthy” at a place
like Subway (where we all know that Jared lost an incredible 245
pounds), you tend to treat yourself to a little something extra.
Ironically, when Wansink’s study participants eat at McDonald’s,
which hasn’t been as aggressive in marketing its foods as
low-calorie, they tend to eat fewer calories than they do when they
visit Subway.
Consumers’ perception of the food as healthy extends across
the menu board to items beyond the low-calorie lunch that Jared
repeatedly ordered. Wansink calls this the “halo effect.”
When you eat cookies at a “healthy” restaurant, you
don’t feel as indulgent because you’ve ordered other
things that are supposedly good for you. That’s why customers
underestimated their tally of calories by 21 percent— after
all, they were eating at a “healthy place.”
Marketing campaigns from restaurants like Subway are effective,
but Wansink stresses that if you believe that a restaurant is healthy,
chances are you’ll eat too much, adding on sodas, side orders,
or desserts. Researchers conclude that this is the reason these
restaurants haven’t had much success at lowering obesity rates,
even though they offer low-calorie options.
—Michele Deppe
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