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Comparison of school day eating behaviours of 8–11 year old children from Adelaide, South Australia, and London, England: Child eating behaviours in South Australia and England

OBJECTIVE: School food intake makes a considerable contribution to children's overall diet, especially fruit and vegetable intake. Comparing differing school food provision systems can provide novel insights for intervention and improved nutrition policy. This study compared school day food in...

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Autores principales: Zarnowiecki, Dorota, Christian, Meaghan S, Dollman, James, Parletta, Natalie, Evans, Charlotte E.L, Cade, Janet E
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: AIMS Press 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6322996/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30631782
http://dx.doi.org/10.3934/publichealth.2018.4.394
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author Zarnowiecki, Dorota
Christian, Meaghan S
Dollman, James
Parletta, Natalie
Evans, Charlotte E.L
Cade, Janet E
author_facet Zarnowiecki, Dorota
Christian, Meaghan S
Dollman, James
Parletta, Natalie
Evans, Charlotte E.L
Cade, Janet E
author_sort Zarnowiecki, Dorota
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVE: School food intake makes a considerable contribution to children's overall diet, especially fruit and vegetable intake. Comparing differing school food provision systems can provide novel insights for intervention and improved nutrition policy. This study compared school day food in children from Australia and England. DESIGN: Children completed food frequency questionnaires reporting school day food intake, breakfast intake and family evening meals. Differences in food consumed over the school day between Australian and English children were evaluated. Multinomial logistic regressions compared fruit and vegetable intake, family dinner frequency and breakfast in Australian and English children adjusting for confounders: age, sex, ethnicity and parent education. SETTING: 27 Primary schools in Adelaide, Australia and 32 in London, England. SUBJECTS: N = 772 children aged 8–11 years from the Australian REACH study (n = 347) and UK RHS School Gardening Trial in England (n = 425). RESULTS: Considerably more English children reported consuming vegetables at school than Australian children (recess/lunchtime Australian children 3.4%/6.1%; English children recess/lunctime 3.6/51.1%). However, Australian children were more likely to consume vegetables daily (OR = 4.1; 1.3, 12.5), and have family evening meals everyday [OR = 4.01; 1.88, 8.55], and were less likely to consume breakfast (OR = 0.26; 0.08, 0.79) than English children. CONCLUSIONS: Findings indicate that provision of a school lunch meal, compared to a packed lunch from home, may be more supportive of children's vegetable intake. However, without a supportive home environment that encourages vegetable intake, children will not be able to consume sufficient amounts of vegetables.
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spelling pubmed-63229962019-01-10 Comparison of school day eating behaviours of 8–11 year old children from Adelaide, South Australia, and London, England: Child eating behaviours in South Australia and England Zarnowiecki, Dorota Christian, Meaghan S Dollman, James Parletta, Natalie Evans, Charlotte E.L Cade, Janet E AIMS Public Health Research Article OBJECTIVE: School food intake makes a considerable contribution to children's overall diet, especially fruit and vegetable intake. Comparing differing school food provision systems can provide novel insights for intervention and improved nutrition policy. This study compared school day food in children from Australia and England. DESIGN: Children completed food frequency questionnaires reporting school day food intake, breakfast intake and family evening meals. Differences in food consumed over the school day between Australian and English children were evaluated. Multinomial logistic regressions compared fruit and vegetable intake, family dinner frequency and breakfast in Australian and English children adjusting for confounders: age, sex, ethnicity and parent education. SETTING: 27 Primary schools in Adelaide, Australia and 32 in London, England. SUBJECTS: N = 772 children aged 8–11 years from the Australian REACH study (n = 347) and UK RHS School Gardening Trial in England (n = 425). RESULTS: Considerably more English children reported consuming vegetables at school than Australian children (recess/lunchtime Australian children 3.4%/6.1%; English children recess/lunctime 3.6/51.1%). However, Australian children were more likely to consume vegetables daily (OR = 4.1; 1.3, 12.5), and have family evening meals everyday [OR = 4.01; 1.88, 8.55], and were less likely to consume breakfast (OR = 0.26; 0.08, 0.79) than English children. CONCLUSIONS: Findings indicate that provision of a school lunch meal, compared to a packed lunch from home, may be more supportive of children's vegetable intake. However, without a supportive home environment that encourages vegetable intake, children will not be able to consume sufficient amounts of vegetables. AIMS Press 2018-10-25 /pmc/articles/PMC6322996/ /pubmed/30631782 http://dx.doi.org/10.3934/publichealth.2018.4.394 Text en © 2018 the Author(s), licensee AIMS Press This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0)
spellingShingle Research Article
Zarnowiecki, Dorota
Christian, Meaghan S
Dollman, James
Parletta, Natalie
Evans, Charlotte E.L
Cade, Janet E
Comparison of school day eating behaviours of 8–11 year old children from Adelaide, South Australia, and London, England: Child eating behaviours in South Australia and England
title Comparison of school day eating behaviours of 8–11 year old children from Adelaide, South Australia, and London, England: Child eating behaviours in South Australia and England
title_full Comparison of school day eating behaviours of 8–11 year old children from Adelaide, South Australia, and London, England: Child eating behaviours in South Australia and England
title_fullStr Comparison of school day eating behaviours of 8–11 year old children from Adelaide, South Australia, and London, England: Child eating behaviours in South Australia and England
title_full_unstemmed Comparison of school day eating behaviours of 8–11 year old children from Adelaide, South Australia, and London, England: Child eating behaviours in South Australia and England
title_short Comparison of school day eating behaviours of 8–11 year old children from Adelaide, South Australia, and London, England: Child eating behaviours in South Australia and England
title_sort comparison of school day eating behaviours of 8–11 year old children from adelaide, south australia, and london, england: child eating behaviours in south australia and england
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6322996/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30631782
http://dx.doi.org/10.3934/publichealth.2018.4.394
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