Sure. I think we've implemented in the curriculum all these healthy lifestyle programs that start in kindergarten and find their way not just into health class but into math and English. Kids are inundated with all this information, sometimes too much information, that they can't really understand or process and that they're not in charge of managing anyway. To keep telling kids that what they're eating is wrong, or that they need to change it when they don't buy their food, don't make their lunches.... It's the one area in education where instead of giving kids age-appropriate tasks where they can practise a skill, we tell them what they're supposed to do and then leave them to figure it out.
If we really want kids to have healthy, nutritious lunches, we need to have a lunch program. We can't tell kids what a healthy lunch is and then expect them to somehow figure out how to do that for themselves. We end up undermining parental authority, interfering with normal development, and we see kids who develop eating disorders because of that.