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Author Topic:   Seniors Balk at Ban on Free Doughnuts
OMG Jay
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Registered: Sep 2007

posted September 23, 2007 10:38 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for OMG Jay     Edit/Delete Message
Seniors Balk at Ban on Free Doughnuts
By JIM FITZGERALD,AP
Posted: 2007-09-23 20:15:04
MAHOPAC, N.Y (Sept. 23) - It was just another morning at the senior center: Women were sewing, men were playing pool - and seven demonstrators, average age 76, were picketing outside, demanding doughnuts.


Photo Gallery: What's Banned for Health Reasons?
Joe Larese, The Journal News / AP Senior citizens in Mahopac, N.Y., on Sept. 13 protest the county's decision to stop serving free doughnuts, pies and breads at senior centers.
1 of 7
They wore sandwich boards proclaiming, "Give Us Our Just Desserts" and "They're Carbs, Not Contraband."

At issue is a decision to refuse free doughnuts, pies and breads that were being donated to senior centers around Putnam County, north of New York City. Officials were concerned that the county was setting a bad nutritional precedent by providing mounds of doughnuts and other sweets to seniors.

The picketers said they were objecting not to a lack of sweets but that they weren't consulted about the ban.

"Lack of respect is what it's all about," said Joe Hajkowski, 75, a former labor union official who organized the demonstration. He said officials had implied that seniors were gorging themselves on jelly doughnuts and were too senile to make the choice for themselves.


What's Your Take?

C. Michael Sibilia said, "I'm 86, not 8."

Inside, some seniors said they missed the doughnuts but others said they were glad to see them go.

"It was disgusting the way people went after them," said 80-year-old Rita Jorgensen. "I think the senior center did them a favor by taking it away."

Stan Tuttle, coordinator of nutritional services for the county's Office for the Aging, said the program had gotten out of control. As many as 16 cases of breads, cakes and pastries were delivered, by various means, to the William Koehler Memorial Senior Center each day. Some were moldy and some had been stored overnight in the trunks of volunteers' cars, he said.

Caregivers there and elsewhere say the doughnut debate illustrates the difficulty of balancing nutrition and choice when providing meals to the elderly.

"Senior citizens can walk down to the store and buy doughnuts. Nobody's stopping them," said Michael Jacobson, executive director of the Center for Science in the Public Interest in Washington.

But he notes that older people have high rates of heart disease and high blood pressure and says senior citizen centers, nursing homes and assisted-living centers should not be worsening the health problems of seniors.

At the North East Bronx Senior Citizen Center, lunch is served five times a week (suggested contribution $1.50).

"We don't tell them what to do, we don't force them to eat what's good for them. But we certainly don't give them anything that's bad for them," said center director Silvia Ponce.

The church-basement senior center, one of 325 under the New York City Department for the Aging, has a mostly Italian-American clientele, a Naples-born cook and a menu that includes eggplant parmigiana, linguini with clams and manicotti.

"We try to give them what they like," said the cook, Stella Bruno.

The lunches have to supply one-third of the federal minimum daily requirements in such categories as calories, protein, vitamin C and vitamin A, said Chris Miller, spokesman for the department.

The Bronx center offers coffee, tea, bagels and rolls in the morning, but nothing in the doughnut family.

"The sweetest thing here is the raisin in the raisin bagel," said Nicholas Volpicella, 87.

Maureen Janowski, director of nutrition resources for Morrison Senior Dining in Atlanta, which provides meals at more than 370 senior living communities, says residents' food preferences depend somewhat on their age. Those born between 1901 and 1925 generally prefer meat and potatoes, and those born between 1925 and 1942 are "a little more trendy, a little more adventurous, a lot more nutrition-savvy," she said.

"They have choices, and we show them how to make good choices," she said.

At the Bronx center, Bruno said she tries to help the seniors avoid the bad buffet choices when they take a trip to Atlantic City. As a group was departing, she handed them bag lunches - with a roast beef sandwich, cranberry juice and carrot sticks.

"Protein, vitamin C, vitamin A," she said.


Copyright 2007 The Associated Press. The information contained in the AP news report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press. All active hyperlinks have been inserted by AOL.
2007-09-23 16:49:25
http://news.aol.com/story/_a/seniors-balk-at-ban-on-free-doughnuts/20070923164909990001?ncid=NWS00010000000001

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Mirandee
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Posts: 4812
From: South of the Thumb - Taurus, Pisces, Cancer
Registered: Sep 2004

posted September 24, 2007 02:21 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for Mirandee     Edit/Delete Message
This is both funny and ridiculous.

quote:
They wore sandwich boards proclaiming, "Give Us Our Just Desserts" and "They're Carbs, Not Contraband."

Yes, damn it!! We seniors want our donuts. Love the "Carbs, Not Contraband" sandwich board.

It is getting ridiculous that the government - federal, state, and local - feel they have to control every aspect of our lives. Even what we eat for crying out loud!!!

Old people don't have that long left on the planet anyway so why can't they just let us enjoy life anyway we choose to live it? Butt out!!!!! Let us decide what is good for us to eat and what isn't.

Isn't it enough that they have all the seniors marching around the mall all day long for exercise? What if I don't want to go out jogging and walking every day and would like to just sit in a front porch swing and watch the world go by? You walk. I'll watch. Leave me alone!!!

I don't blame the seniors for getting mad over their donuts.

The government is really getting out of hand and out of line butting into the private lives of citzens in every aspect of our lives. Leave us alone!!!! They can't even run the government efficiently. They make a mess of everything and they want to run our lives? I think not!!!! I would rather take my chances on the donuts than trust the government to know what is good for me.

Especially all those fat politicians. What are they eating?

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Mirandee
Knowflake

Posts: 4812
From: South of the Thumb - Taurus, Pisces, Cancer
Registered: Sep 2004

posted September 24, 2007 02:31 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for Mirandee     Edit/Delete Message
I like the chocolate frosted ones

edited to add - there are more calories and carbs in a bagel than a donut. Bagels are the most fattening thing on the planet.

If you are in a triathelon the bagel would be the best choice. But not if you are senior citzen or not into sports and body building.

The Calories:
As you might imagine the bagel has almost double the calories. A bagel is much more dense than doughnut. These additional calories are a result of additional nearly 3 times the carbohydrates of a doughnut and almost 4 times the amount of protein. The important thing is to try to get more bang for your buck. The lower the caloric density the lower the calories per gram. For keeping the weight off… lower is better. Using the formula (total calories / weight in grams) the bagel has a caloric density of 2.5 and the doughnut’s density is 2.76. (Dunkin doughnut weight estimated at 68 grams based on an average of several doughnut stores. I know this isn’t the most accurate method… but it is all I got.) The resulting densities are pretty close… and since one was estimated it is safe to say they are pretty equal.

The Carbohydrates:

With respect to fuel, complex carbohydrates are best. The bagel has 5 grams of complex carbohydrates and the doughnut only 1 gram. Therefore the bagel is the better choice for carbohydrates. Complex carbohydrates take longer to break down and therefore the insulin (that stores the carbohydrates as fat) that is released from your body cant break down the carbohydrate as fast, giving the carbohydrate more time to get to muscles where it is needed for energy.

The sugar and carbs in a donut burn faster than in a bagel. They are making these seniors fat on bagels. Of course if you eat a whole box of Dunkin' Donuts the bagel would be the better choice.

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