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Editorials

School canteens: using ripples to create a wave of healthy eating

A Colin Bell and Boyd A Swinburn
MJA 2005; 183 (1): 5-6

Canteens are not the main source of food for Australian school kids, but their symbolism is big

There is widespread awareness of the obesity epidemic in Australian children,1 and the focus has now, quite appropriately, turned to action. In the United Kingdom, celebrity chef Jamie Oliver is trying to transform a 100-year-old school lunch service from “soggy and fried” to “crisp and fresh”. In Australia, the question is whether school canteens should be a high priority for action, because of their accessibility and visibility, or a low priority, on the grounds that canteen foods contribute little to children’s energy intake.

Negative ripples from canteens

Over the period of a year, children aged 5–15 years obtain only about 16% of their total energy intake from food eaten at school, and probably less than 3% comes from canteens.2 But while the energy contribution is small, the symbolism is big. Canteen users consume significantly greater amounts of foods likely to promote unhealthy weight gain, such as fast foods, confectionery and packaged snacks.2 The types of foods and beverages that predominate in school canteens not only undermine the health and nutrition curriculum, but also create the impression that foods and drinks that are high in fat, sugar and salt belong on the plate as “everyday foods”, rather than on the side as “occasional foods”. Other common practices in schools that undermine healthy eating messages include rewarding children with sweets, having soft-drink and confectionery vending machines, holding sporting events with fast-food vouchers as prizes, and using chocolate drives for fundraising. All these practices create negative ripple effects on Australian family eating practices and beliefs.3 Children are developing the food preferences that they will carry with them into adulthood, so strengthening family and school environments for enjoying healthier food choices is critical.

In a 2004 survey of 18 Victorian primary schools (unpublished data), we found that, of the 17 with a food service, all sold meat pies, but only five sold fruit on a regular basis. As a rule, canteen managers provided foods that sold well and had a long shelf life. They usually had no mandate or support to do otherwise. A reliance on profits from canteens, vending machines and “junk food fundraising” also makes it hard for schools, particularly high schools, to model healthy eating. In common with a survey of 500 New Zealand schools,4 we found that schools readily recognise the rather poor job they do of providing a healthy food environment. Most schools do not see food provision as part of their core business and lack the inclination or resources to take on this “added” responsibility. Private enterprise fills this vacuum, with the result that the health of profits increasingly dominates the health of pupils. An extreme example is the “cola war” in the United States, in which the weapons of choice have been contracts with schools to sell minimum volumes of Coca Cola or Pepsi.5

Creating a new epidemic?

Perhaps we should consider the task ahead of us as the creation of a new epidemic of healthy eating rather than reducing an obesity epidemic. Using the principles in Gladwell’s recent bestseller The tipping point,6 the school canteen and students themselves could be the catalyst for healthier eating among children and adolescents — turning negative ripples into positive waves.

Can a “tipping point” be created from a handful of champion schools that decide to embrace the whole-of-school policies and strategies needed to get their canteens right (healthy, enjoyable, profitable and supported), hoping that others will follow their lead? This is almost certainly too much to expect to happen in 9000 schools across Australia, which tend to function semi-autonomously on these matters. Lessons from successful public health programs, such as sun protection and injury prevention, show that tipping the balance in targeted behaviours from unhealthy to healthy requires a backbone of strong central policy, ongoing social marketing, and supported and coordinated implementation of programs.

Some Australian models

Various government-supported models influence how school canteens operate in Australia. Probably the least effective include the Victorian model of simply disseminating canteen guidelines7 and the Australian Government model from the pre-election spending spree, wherein each school could apply for $1500 to reinvent the “healthy canteen” wheel. Neither has policy, social marketing or implementation support.

A third model, which has some merit, is exemplified by the Western Australian (StarCAP8) and Tasmanian (Cool CAP9) school canteen accreditation programs. Both have well developed criteria and processes for schools to work through to achieve program accreditation. StarCAP is backed by the WA government, but is managed on a shoestring budget, without policy and social marketing support, and thus has a low accreditation rate (7% of schools) and declining reach.10 Cool CAP is newer, with a higher accreditation rate (42% of schools accredited or working towards it), and so far has been successful in securing legislative and monetary support. Ultimately, however, the impact of these types of programs will probably be modest as long as the impetus to change remains with each individual school.

Because they are well supported and centrally driven, the most promising models come from New South Wales and South Australia. The NSW Healthy School Canteen Strategy (“Fresh Tastes @ School”)11 grew out of the NSW Government Childhood Obesity Summit in 2002. It is now mandatory for state schools to provide food and beverage choices consistent with the Australian guide to healthy eating.12 NSW Health has also boosted support for the NSW Canteen Association so that it, in turn, can support schools to operate economically viable, nutrition-oriented school canteens. Early positive waves include support from parents, canteen managers, some food companies and, increasingly, local health and education services. A similar model released in 2004 in South Australia brings SA government backing to a set of healthy eating guidelines.13 The guidelines encourage links between the canteen, the community and teaching about nutrition food skills. Both the NSW and SA government models would now benefit from social marketing explaining the rationale, processes and support for the program. It would make sense, for example, to link these strategies with the national “Go for 2&5” (2 serves of fruit and 5 serves of vegetables) campaign.14

If we are serious about the childhood obesity epidemic, school canteens are a good place to start, because they carry a symbolism that ripples into the Australian diet far beyond their contribution to energy intake. At the moment, the ripples are a negative and undermining force. However, full implementation of the NSW or SA models for school canteens throughout the country could just tip the balance towards an outbreak of healthier eating.

Acknowledgements

We thank Bill Bellew, Elizabeth Develin, Sally Burt, Renee Andrews, Christina Pollard, Jan Lewis and Leon Calvetti for their valuable input. Colin Bell is supported by a VicHealth Public Health Research Fellowship.

References
  1. Batch JA, Baur LA. Management and prevention of obesity and its complications in children and adolescents. Med J Aust 2005; 182: 130-135. <eMJA full text> <PubMed>
  2. Bell AC, Swinburn BA. What are the key food groups to target for preventing obesity and improving nutrition in schools? Eur J Clin Nutr 2004; 58: 258-263. <PubMed>
  3. Hesketh K, Waters E, Green J, et al. Healthy eating, activity and obesity prevention: a qualitative study of parent and child perceptions in Australia. Health Promot Int 2005; 20: 19-26. <PubMed>
  4. Carter MA, Swinburn BA. Measuring the “obesogenic” food environment in New Zealand primary schools. Health Promot Int 2004; 19: 15-20. <PubMed>
  5. Story M, French S. Food marketing and advertising directed at children and adolescents in the U.S. Int J Behav Nutr Phys Act 2004; 1: 3. <PubMed>
  6. Gladwell M. The tipping point: how little things can make a big difference. London: Little, Brown and Company, 2000.
  7. Victorian Government. Department of Education and Training. Guidelines for school canteens and other school food services. Executive memorandum No. 2003/017, 13 May 2003. Available at: http://www.sofweb.vic.edu.au/scln/docs/ExecMemo017.doc (accessed May 2005).
  8. WA School Canteen Association Inc. Star Canteen Accreditation Program. Available at: http://www.waschoolcanteens.org.au/pages/starcap/01-starcap.htm (accessed May 2005).
  9. Tasmanian School Canteen Assocation Inc. Projects. Cool canteen for kids. Available at: http://www.tased.edu.au/tasonline/tsca (accessed May 2005).
  10. Calvetti L. Canteen, vending machine and breakfast program census survey of Western Australian schools [masters thesis]. Melbourne: Deakin University, 2004.
  11. NSW School Canteen Association. Facts sheets. Fresh Tastes @ School. Available at: http://www.schoolcanteens.org.au/default.asp?action=article&ID=249 (accessed May 2005).
  12. The Australian guide to healthy eating. Consumer booklet. Canberra: Australian Government Department of Health and Ageing, 1998. Available at: http://www.health.gov.au/internet/wcms/Publishing.nsf/Content/health-pubhlth-publicat-document-fdcons-cnt.htm (accessed May 2005).
  13. Government of South Australia. Department of Health and Department of Education and Children’s Services. Eat well SA schools and preschools. Healthy eating guidelines. 2004. Available at: http://www.decs.sa.gov.au/speced/pages/default/eatwellsa (accessed May 2005).
  14. Australian Government Department of Health and Ageing. Go for 2&5. Available at: http://www.gofor2and5.com.au/ (accessed May 2005).

(Received 4 Mar 2005, accepted 9 May 2005)

School of Exercise and Nutrition Sciences, Deakin University, Geelong, VIC.

A Colin Bell, BSc(Hons), MSc, PhD, Senior Research Fellow/VicHealth Public Health Research Fellow.

School of Exercise and Nutrition Sciences, Deakin University, Melbourne, VIC.

Boyd A Swinburn, MB ChB, MD, FRACP, Professor.

Correspondence: Dr A Colin Bell, School of Exercise and Nutrition Sciences, Deakin University, 1 Gheringhap Street, Geelong, VIC 3217. colin.bellATdeakin.edu.au

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