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McDonald's Advises Employees to Avoid Eating…Fast Food

McDonald's Advises Employees to Avoid Eating…Fast Food

Not the first gaffe.

[Editor’s note: The following is a crosspost by Katie Little that originally appeared on CNBC.com]:

Oops, it happened again.

McDonald's employee resources website is giving out even more odd advice for workers. This time, it's about the industry it helped make ubiquitous—fast food.

"Fast foods are quick, reasonably priced, and readily available alternatives to home cooking. While convenient and economical for a busy lifestyle, fast foods are typically high in calories, fat, saturated fat, sugar, and salt and may put people at risk for becoming overweight," reads one post on the site, which includes a picture of a hamburger and fries, two items that the fast-food giant specializes in selling.

Image via CNBC.com

Another post labels a meal with a cheeseburger and fries as the "unhealthy choice" and one with a submarine sandwich and salad as the "healthier choice," noting that it's more of a challenge to eat healthy when visiting a fast-food place.

A separate post writes "it is hard to eat a healthy diet when you eat at fast-food restaurants often," adding that large portions make it easy to overeat.

The site also advises people to limit how many fries they eat.

"In general, people with high blood pressure, diabetes, and heart disease must be very careful about choosing fast food because of its high fat, salt, and sugar levels," the post said, adding that items from fast-food places are "almost always high" in calories, fat, sugar and salt.

Image via CNBC.com

The posts appear to be content provided by a third-party vendor. A McDonald's spokeswoman said the company was looking into the matter.

It was the latest in a series of gaffes involving the site.

Last month, the company detailed tipping advice for workers, many of whom make around minimum wage. It listed pricey suggestions for tipping au pairs, personal fitness trainers and pool cleaners from etiquette maven Emily Post—advice it removed after a CNBC inquiry. McDonald's told CNBC the post was third-party material and said it would "continue to review the resource and will ask the vendor to make changes as needed."

Although the McResource Line is nominally a site for employees, it is accessible via a registration process that does not actually verify employee credentials, meaning anyone can register for it by providing a username and email address and selecting a McDonald's region.

This advice is available on McDonald's site at a time when the fast-food giant has been working hard to distance itself from fast-food's reputation as bad for you, adding more fruits and vegetables and fat-free chocolate milk.

At its annual shareholder meeting in late May, McDonald's CEO Don Thompson defended his company's food, saying, "We don't sell junk food."

McDonald's also saw backlash after it advised employees to get out of holiday debt by returning unopened purchases and after it published a budget guide that included no money for heat and $20 a month for health care.

Image via CNBC.com

Image via CNBC.com

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©2013 CNBC LLC. All Rights Reserved, Katie Little.

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