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Meals Offered and Served in US Public Schools: Do They Meet Nutrient Standards? - 24/08/11

Doi : 10.1016/j.jada.2008.10.061 
Mary Kay Crepinsek, MS, RD , Anne R. Gordon, PhD, Patricia M. McKinney, MS, RD, Elizabeth M. Condon, MS, RD, Ander Wilson

Address correspondence to: Mary Kay Crepinsek, MS, RD, Mathematica Policy Research, Inc, 955 Massachusetts Ave, Ste 801, Cambridge, MA 02139

Abstract

Background

Concerns about the diets of school-aged children and new nutrition recommendations for the US population have increased interest in the nutritional quality of meals available through the National School Lunch Program and School Breakfast Program.

Objective

This article updates national estimates of the food energy and nutrient content of school meals and compares these estimates to federal nutrient standards established under the 1995 School Meals Initiative for Healthy Children.

Design

Data were collected as part of the third School Nutrition Dietary Assessment Study, a nationally representative cross-sectional study fielded during school year 2004-2005. Menu and recipe data for a typical school week were collected in a mail survey with telephone assistance. Nutrient information for common commercially prepared food items was obtained from manufacturers, to supplement the Food and Nutrient Database for Dietary Studies used to analyze the data. Analyses were conducted for meals offered and meals served to (selected by) children.

Subjects/setting

Samples of 130 public school districts that offered federally subsidized school meals, and 398 schools within those districts, participated in the study. Foodservice managers in each school completed a menu survey.

Statistical analyses performed

Descriptive tabulations present weighted means, proportions, and standard errors for elementary, middle, and high schools, and for all schools combined.

Results

Most schools offered and served meals that met the standards for protein, vitamins, and minerals. Fewer than one third of schools met the standards for energy from fat or saturated fat in the average lunch, whereas three fourths or more met the fat standards in school breakfasts. For both meals, average levels of sodium were high and fiber was low relative to Dietary Guidelines for Americans 2005 recommendations.

Conclusions

For school meals to meet nutrient standards and promote eating behaviors consistent with the Dietary Guidelines, future policy, practice, and research should focus on reducing levels of fat and sodium and increasing fiber.

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 Meets Learning Need Codes 3000, 3020, 4000, 4160, 8000, and 8110. To take the Continuing Professional Education quiz for this article, log in to ADA's Online Business Center at obc, click the “Journal Article Quiz” button, click “Additional Journal CPE Articles,” and select this article's title from a list of available quizzes.
 STATEMENT OF CONFLICT OF INTEREST: See page S42.
 Address reprint requests to: Jackie Allen, Mathematica Policy Research, Inc, PO Box 2393, Princeton, NJ 08543-2393.jallen@mathematica-mpr.com


© 2009  Publié par Elsevier Masson SAS.
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Vol 109 - N° 2S

P. S31-S43 - février 2009 Retour au numéro
Article précédent Article précédent
  • The Third School Nutrition Dietary Assessment Study: Background and Study Design
  • Anne R. Gordon, Rhoda Cohen, Mary Kay Crepinsek, Mary Kay Fox, John Hall, Eric Zeidman
| Article suivant Article suivant
  • Nutritional Quality of the Diets of US Public School Children and the Role of the School Meal Programs
  • Melissa A. Clark, Mary Kay Fox

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