Zinczenko argues that most teenagers who live a lifestyle based on a fast food diet might be destined for a lifetime obesity. For Example, David Zinczenko states in his article” Don’t Blame the Eater”, that “Before 1994, diabetes in children was generally caused by a genetic disorder-only about 5 percent of children cases were obesity related, or type 2, diabetes. Today, according to the National Institutes of Health, Type 2 diabetes accounts for at least 30 percent of all new childhood cases of diabetes in this country. Not surprisingly, money spent to treat diabetes has skyrocketed, too. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimate that diabetes accounted for $2.6 billion in health care costs in 1969. Today’s number is an unbelievable $100 billion a year” (Zinczenko 242). He argues that it is the fast food chains’ fault that diabetes and other obesity illnesses have risen in the few past years because they did not provide calorie information on fast food packaging or do not have warning labels on their product. David Zinczenko also argues that the fast food industry are to blame for obesity because they are aiming and marketing towards children their product even though the fast food chains know the proven health issues that there is and provide no warning
Zinczenko argues that most teenagers who live a lifestyle based on a fast food diet might be destined for a lifetime obesity. For Example, David Zinczenko states in his article” Don’t Blame the Eater”, that “Before 1994, diabetes in children was generally caused by a genetic disorder-only about 5 percent of children cases were obesity related, or type 2, diabetes. Today, according to the National Institutes of Health, Type 2 diabetes accounts for at least 30 percent of all new childhood cases of diabetes in this country. Not surprisingly, money spent to treat diabetes has skyrocketed, too. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimate that diabetes accounted for $2.6 billion in health care costs in 1969. Today’s number is an unbelievable $100 billion a year” (Zinczenko 242). He argues that it is the fast food chains’ fault that diabetes and other obesity illnesses have risen in the few past years because they did not provide calorie information on fast food packaging or do not have warning labels on their product. David Zinczenko also argues that the fast food industry are to blame for obesity because they are aiming and marketing towards children their product even though the fast food chains know the proven health issues that there is and provide no warning