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Teachers received 10 hours of training in teaching nutrition, and students received 50 hours of nutrition education over the course of the year.
Kids were rewarded for healthy snacking and encouraged to save their appetites for healthy meals. Nutritious snacks and drinks earned them raffle tickets to win prizes.
Nutrition educators encouraged parents and students to purchase healthy snacks. Students were challenged to be less sedentary and more physically active, and to eat more fruits and vegetables.
For details on the School Nutrition Policy Initiative, go to www.thefoodtrust.org/php/programs/comp.school.nutrition.php
Only 7.5 percent of children became overweight in intervention schools, compared with 15 percent of children who became overweight in comparison schools. The intervention was even more effective in African American students, who were less likely to be overweight than those in the comparison schools after two years.
The results are particularly interesting for urban schools, where rates of childhood obesity are disproportionately higher than in suburban areas and greatly affected by the surrounding environment.
“In some inner-city neighborhoods, it’s safer to stay inside after school than to go outside and play. When money is tight, it’s cheaper to feed your kids convenience foods, which are usually higher in fat and calories. Multiple environmental factors are responsible for the childhood obesity epidemic,” said Foster.
Despite the success of the interventions, the fact that 7.5 percent of children in School Nutrition Policy Initiative schools still gained weight over the two-year period suggests that stronger or additional interventions are needed, such as more time spent on physical education, more aggressive nutrition policies, and interventions that target the environment outside of schools.
The researchers also recommend that prevention programs begin even earlier than 4th grade, as the prevalence of overweight children (BMI above the 85th percentile) in grades 4 through 6 is already high at 41.7 percent.
Temple and The Food Trust are currently working together on a corner store initiative, designed to improve the nutrition of food and snacks for sale at neighborhood stores.
“A Policy-Based School Intervention to Prevent Overweight and Obesity,” April 2008, Pediatrics, by Gary D. Foster, PhD, a, Sandy Sherman, b, Kelley E. Borradaile, a, Karen M. Grundy, c, Stephanie S. Vander Veur, a, Joan Nachmani, d, Allison Karpyn, b, Shiriki Kumanyika, e, Justine Shults, e.
a Temple University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; b The Food Trust; c Bryn Mawr College; d School District of Philadelphia; e University of Pennsylvania.
This study was supported by grants from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the U.S. Department of Agriculture/Food and Nutrition Service through the Pennsylvania Nutrition Education Program (PENNSYLVANIA TRACKS).
The authors have indicated they have no financial relationships relevant to this article to disclose. |