Preschool and School Meal Policies: An Overview of What We Know about Regulation, Implementation, and Impact on Diet in the UK, Sweden, and Australia
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Background and Aims
1.2. School Food as a Public Health Nutrition Intervention
1.3. Country Contexts
2. UK National Preschool and Primary Food Policy
2.1. UK Regional Preschool Food Policies
2.2. UK Regional School Food Policies
2.3. UK Reach and Implementation of Preschool and Primary Food Policy
2.4. UK Impact of Policy on Diet Quality
3. Swedish Preschool and Primary Meals Provision
3.1. Swedish Preschool and Primary School Meals Guidelines
3.2. Sweden: Reach, Implementation and Impact of Preschool and Primary School Meals Policy
4. Australian Preschool and Primary School Meals
4.1. Australian Preschool Meal Policies
4.2. Australian Primary and Secondary School Meal Policies
4.3. Australian Reach, Implementation, and Impact of Preschool and School Meals Policies
5. Discussion
5.1. Implications for Policy
5.2. Implications for Practice
5.3. Implications for Research
6. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Acknowledgments
Author Contributions
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Food | Standard or Guidance | Level, Country (Jurisdiction) |
---|---|---|
Fruit and vegetables | Minimum number portions per day/meal | School and Preschool, UK (England, Scotland) |
Meat, fish, eggs, and non-dairy protein | ||
Starchy foods | Recommended number of portions per day | School and Preschool, UK (England, Scotland) |
Milk and dairy | ||
Drinks | Fresh water to be freely available | School and Preschool, UK (England, Scotland) |
Diluted fruit juice or fresh cows’ milks | Preschool, UK (England, Scotland) | |
Traffic Light: “Green” foods | Minimum of 60% of food and snacks sold should be “Green” | School, Australia (WA *) |
Should be available every day the canteen is open | School, Australia (NT, SA, Q, V *) | |
Every-day (Core) foods | Recommended to make up 75% of food and drinks sold | School, Australia (NSW *) |
“Nutritious” meals | Meals must be “nutritious”. Preschool meals must also be “varied”, and “evenly distributed over the day” | School and Preschool, Sweden |
“Good meals in preschool” | Suggestions provided for meal components and nutritional content (e.g., serve fatty fish twice within 4 weeks, serve only milk and water to drink, provide a wide selection of salads, include wholegrain versions of products etc.) | School and Preschool, Sweden |
“Good school meals” |
Food | Standard or Guidance | Level, Country (Jurisdiction) |
---|---|---|
Meat, fish, eggs, and non-dairy protein | Maximum number portions | School, UK (England), Preschool UK (Scotland) |
Starchy foods | Maximum number of occasions higher fat versions offered (fried starchy foods and cheese as protein) | School, UK (England) |
Milk and dairy food | ||
Traffic Light: “Amber” foods | Maximum of 40% of foods and drinks sold should be “Amber” | School, Australia (WA *) |
“Amber” foods should be limited and sold in smaller serve sizes | School, Australia (NT, SA, Q, V *) | |
Desserts & Puddings | To be served only once per day with main meal | School and Preschool, UK (England, Scotland) |
Occasional (non-core) foods | Maximum of 25% of food and drinks sold should be “occasional” and least healthy not sold | School, Australia (NSW *) |
Foods high in fat, salt, and sugar | Avoided or limited | School and Preschool, UK (England, Scotland) |
Traffic Light: “Red” foods | “Red” foods prohibited or limited to special occasions (no more than twice per term) | School, Australia (NT, SA, Q, V *) |
“Red” foods prohibited | School, Australia (NT, SA, Q, V *) | |
Salt and condiments | Reduced or not salt in cooking, No salt available to add. Condiments avoided or size limited. | School and Preschool, UK (England, Scotland) |
Should not be available to students | School and Preschool, Sweden | |
Drinks | All those not specified to be excluded | School and Preschool, UK (England, Scotland) |
“Amber” drinks should be avoided and sold in smaller serve sizes | School, Australia (NT, SA, Q, V *) | |
“Red” drinks (sugary) not to be sold and not permitted | School, Australia (all states and territories) | |
No sweet drinks containing sugar or sweetener | School and Preschool, Sweden | |
Confectionary | Not permitted | School and Preschool, UK (England, Scotland) |
Not permitted | School, Australia (all states and territories) | |
Should not be provided | School and Preschool, Sweden |
Policy | Country (Jurisdiction) | Level | Reach | Cost to Families | System of Monitoring |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Food Based Standards for Schools in England | UK (England) | School | Mandatory for local government controlled schools and schools that became academies before 2010 and after June 2014. Recommended for remaining academies and private schools. | Free for 4–7 years | Included in the Office of Standards in Education (OFSTED) inspection report on healthy eating. |
Paid for other years | |||||
Voluntary Guidance | UK (England) | Preschool | Voluntary | Paid | Not monitored in OFSTED inspections, although the Early Years Foundation Stage (EYFS) requires that provided food must be “healthy balanced and nutritious” (EYFS 2017). |
Preschool standards | UK (Scotland) | Preschool | Mandatory for all settings registered with the Care Inspectorate. | Paid | Inspected by the Care Inspectorate. EEC must show they provide opportunities for children to learn about diet and health. EEC must show children have access to a well-balanced and healthy diet. For example, through use of a food policy. |
Traffic light food groups | Australia (Australia Capital Territory) | School | Policy applies to all food services activities within a school setting. Mandatory for government schools. In independent and Catholic schools, it is not mandatory but highly recommended. | Paid | Independent compliance monitoring. Free assessment, resources and training available for canteens. Facilitate government license agreements with school canteens. |
Australia (Northern Territory) | School | Policy applies to all food services activities within a school setting. Mandatory for government schools | Paid | Independent compliance monitoring, schools responsible for oversight. | |
Australia (South Australia) | School | Policy applies to all food services activities within a school setting. Mandatory for government schools. Catholic and independent school sectors support implementation of the policy. | Paid | Independent compliance monitoring, schools responsible for oversight. Resources provided to canteens. | |
Australia (Queensland) | School | Policy applies to all food services activities within a school setting. Mandatory for government schools. | Paid | Independent compliance monitoring, schools responsible for oversight. Training and resources provided to canteens. | |
Australia (Tasmania) | School | Schools are recommended (not mandatory) to apply to have their canteen accredited. | Paid | Training, resources and monitoring available to canteens. | |
Australia (Victoria) | School | Policy applies to all food services activities within a school setting. Mandatory for government schools. | Paid | Independent compliance monitoring, schools responsible for oversight. Optional monitoring and assessment of canteens available. Training and resources provided to canteens. | |
Every-day vs. occasional foods | Australia (New South Wales) | School | Policy applies to all food services activities within a school setting. Mandatory for government schools. Catholic and independent schools are also encouraged to participate. | Paid | Independent compliance monitoring, schools responsible for oversight. Resources provided to canteens. |
Traffic light and core vs. non-core foods | Australia (Western Australia) | School | Policy applies to all food services activities within a school setting. Mandatory for government schools. Catholic schools have a similar mandatory policy. | Paid | Principals are required to develop and implement a whole school-based policy on the provision of healthy food and drinks and ensure that the school canteen/food service menu complies with the requirements of the policy. |
Nutritious preschool meals | Sweden | Preschool | Legislation. Mandatory for all (whether local authority or privately run). | Free or subsidized * | Monitoring of provision and cost is not required. Monitoring of nutritional quality falls to the management (i.e., the local authority or owner). |
Nutritious school meals | Sweden | School | Legislation. Mandatory for all (whether local authority or privately run). | Free | Monitoring of provision and cost is not required. Monitoring of nutritional quality falls under the School Inspectorate, but is delagated to the school management (i.e., the local authority or owner). |
“Good meals in preschool”, “Good school meals” | Sweden | Preschool, School | Guidelines. Voluntary for all. | Free or subsidized * | Not applicable, but for schools, compliance with several of the guidelines can be demonstrated using “School Food Sweden” tool. |
© 2017 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
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Lucas, P.J.; Patterson, E.; Sacks, G.; Billich, N.; Evans, C.E.L. Preschool and School Meal Policies: An Overview of What We Know about Regulation, Implementation, and Impact on Diet in the UK, Sweden, and Australia. Nutrients 2017, 9, 736. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu9070736
Lucas PJ, Patterson E, Sacks G, Billich N, Evans CEL. Preschool and School Meal Policies: An Overview of What We Know about Regulation, Implementation, and Impact on Diet in the UK, Sweden, and Australia. Nutrients. 2017; 9(7):736. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu9070736
Chicago/Turabian StyleLucas, Patricia Jane, Emma Patterson, Gary Sacks, Natassja Billich, and Charlotte Elizabeth Louise Evans. 2017. "Preschool and School Meal Policies: An Overview of What We Know about Regulation, Implementation, and Impact on Diet in the UK, Sweden, and Australia" Nutrients 9, no. 7: 736. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu9070736
APA StyleLucas, P. J., Patterson, E., Sacks, G., Billich, N., & Evans, C. E. L. (2017). Preschool and School Meal Policies: An Overview of What We Know about Regulation, Implementation, and Impact on Diet in the UK, Sweden, and Australia. Nutrients, 9(7), 736. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu9070736