Healthy Living

Tuesday, December 8, 2009

The worst of the cheap: What are the 5 unhealthiest fast food value items you can order?

When budgets and schedules are tight, it makes sense that people feel an even stronger impulse to whip through the drive-through for dinner. It's hard not to consider a value meal, even if it's not one of the healthier items on the menu, when it only costs a few dollars for a full plate (or tray or bag, as the case may be) of food.

The Cancer Project, a nonprofit cancer prevention organization that is linked with the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine, is concerned that these economic times are not just driving people to eat more fast food, but to regularly consume meals full of unhealthy ingredients. Dollar meals, they say, might not be such a good value once the health implications are factored in. Their biggest issues for low-cost fast food? All the processed meat, salt, cholesterol and fat wrapped into each meal.

The organization put their dietitians to work to determine what meals at the five biggest fast food chains are the worst offenders for our health, measuring the sodium, fat, and fiber content. Here are the five meals they deemed the worst of the fast and the cheap:

1.  Jack in the Box's junior bacon cheeseburger (23 grams of fat, including 8 grams of saturated fat, 55 milligrams of cholesterol, 860 milligrams of sodium, 1 gram of fiber) costs $1 and is the organization's top pick for unhealthy fast food.

2. Taco Bell cheesy double beef burrito (460 calories, 20 grams of fat, and 1,620 milligrams of sodium) is 89 cents.

3. Burger King breakfast sausage biscuit (27 grams of fat, including 15 grams of saturated fat, and more than 1,000 milligrams of sodium) is available for one dollar.

4. McDonald’s McDouble
(19 grams of fat and 65 milligrams of cholesterol) costs the consumer $1.

5. Wendy’s junior bacon cheeseburger (310 calories and 16 grams of fat) is the most expensive and the best of the worst, ringing in at $1.53.

To be fair, it should be noted that the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine does promote vegetarian diets that are low-fat. But I have to admit, after reading the nutritional make-up of those fast food menu items, I feel like my arteries are getting clogged just noting all the fat and salt packed into each one.

Does the cost and convenience of fast food lure you into unhealthy eating, especially in this economy?

Does seeing how unhealthy these cheap eats are make you really crave a salad for dinner or will you order them up again anyway?




More reading for that awkward time while the deep fryer's warming up:


[photo credit: Getty Images]
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From the Community…

Comments 391-400 of 404
  • Mazhar's Avatar
    Posted by Mazhar Tue Oct 27, 2009 5:53am PDT

    it w`d be nice if cheaper (healthier) alt were also suggested.

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  • David's Avatar
    Posted by David Tue Oct 27, 2009 8:02am PDT

    I weighed 278 lbs after eating that garbage. I now weigh 150 lbs and will never go back into one of those death stores. Look at the kids they even are beginning to look like fat slobs.

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  • JuneS's Avatar
    Posted by JuneS Tue Oct 27, 2009 9:50am PDT

    Fast food needs to clean up their mess . If people could get good food at a fast place and that was all they could get, no tasty junk food , in time people would not crave the cholesterol ,sodium laced foods.

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  • Monica's Avatar
    Posted by Monica Tue Oct 27, 2009 10:49am PDT

    Its all about choices. If there is a McDonalds, a Burger King, a Chinese resturant and a Subways all on the same block which one would you choose?

    Right now I am eating a Subways Tuna on wheat with Lettuce and Black Olives and a Diet Pepsi. I could've easily went to those other places...but I CHOOSE to eat healthier. Is it easy ...NO but showing our kids (and I have 3 teenagers at home) that they have a choice.

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