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Halloween experiment shows Michelle Obama’s health campaign works

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(MCT) — LOS ANGELES — As President Barack Obama and Mitt Romney make a last-minute push for votes, first lady Michelle Obama can already chalk up a small victory for her campaign to fight childhood obesity.

In a semi-scientific study conducted on the front porch of a Yale University economist on Halloween night, kids who viewed a picture of the first lady and were then offered a choice of fruit or candy were much more likely to select the healthful snack than their counterparts who were shown a photo of Ann Romney.

The experiment included 165 trick-or-treaters who came to Dean Karlan’s porch in New Haven, Conn. To earn their candy, they had to participate in Karlan’s unconventional economic research.

Working with student volunteers, his wife, Cindy, and their three children — ages 13, 12 and 10 — Karlan had the kids look at a picture of one of the presidential candidates’ spouses. Then they were asked to pick either candy or fruit. Among those 9 and older, 38 percent who were presented with Obama’s photo opted for fruit, Karlan said. That was twice as many as the 19 percent who picked fruit after viewing the picture of Romney.

Obama’s “Let’s Move” campaign must be having an effect on those kids old enough to hear about it, Karlan surmised.

“That was really cool,” he said of the double-digit effect.

Unfortunately for the public health crowd, there was no similar effect in the 8-and-under crowd — perhaps because they were too young to have been exposed to the campaign, or even know who Obama is, Karlan said.

The results may not meet Yale’s usual standards of experimental rigor, Karlan acknowledged. But the study did impress his colleague Christopher Udry, an economist who was not involved in the research effort.

“That’s a blast,” said Udry, who lives in Karlan’s neighborhood and allowed his kids to be test subjects. “I think Michelle Obama should be told about this.”

In another experiment, Karlan asked 158 children to “vote” for either the Democratic president or his Republican challenger. Heading to either candidate’s table would earn one candy. Not surprisingly to Karlan, the children in his liberal-leaning neighborhood picked Obama by a margin of more than 4 to 1.

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