Cargando…

School Meal Programs in Africa: Regional Results From the 2019 Global Survey of School Meal Programs

INTRODUCTION: School meal programs operate throughout Africa, serving as a social safety net and aiming to improve children's nutrition, influence their dietary choices, and strengthen the agrifood economy through local procurement. Despite their rapid expansion in the past decade, there has be...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Wineman, Ayala, Ekwueme, Moses C., Bigayimpunzi, Liliane, Martin-Daihirou, Alice, de Gois V. N. Rodrigues, Eth Ludmilla, Etuge, Priscilia, Warner, Yale, Kessler, Heidi, Mitchell, Arlene
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9178184/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35692321
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpubh.2022.871866
_version_ 1784723002871513088
author Wineman, Ayala
Ekwueme, Moses C.
Bigayimpunzi, Liliane
Martin-Daihirou, Alice
de Gois V. N. Rodrigues, Eth Ludmilla
Etuge, Priscilia
Warner, Yale
Kessler, Heidi
Mitchell, Arlene
author_facet Wineman, Ayala
Ekwueme, Moses C.
Bigayimpunzi, Liliane
Martin-Daihirou, Alice
de Gois V. N. Rodrigues, Eth Ludmilla
Etuge, Priscilia
Warner, Yale
Kessler, Heidi
Mitchell, Arlene
author_sort Wineman, Ayala
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: School meal programs operate throughout Africa, serving as a social safety net and aiming to improve children's nutrition, influence their dietary choices, and strengthen the agrifood economy through local procurement. Despite their rapid expansion in the past decade, there has been no systematic effort to comprehensively document school feeding activities across the continent. METHODS: Detailed information on school feeding activities in each country was captured in the Global Survey of School Meal Programs©, which launched in 2019. An invitation to participate was extended to each government, which appointed a national-level respondent to gather information on every large-scale school meal program in the country. RESULTS: Forty-one countries in Africa (38 in sub-Saharan Africa) responded to the survey in 2019 with information on 68 large-scale programs that together reached 60.1 million children. Across these countries, the aggregate school feeding budget was USD 1.3 billion. Diversity in school meal programs is evident across regions, country income levels, and levels of national commitment. Coverage rates tended to be highest in southern Africa, in countries with school feeding as a line item in the national budget, and in countries with the greatest domestic share of the school feeding budget. Diversity in the school menu tended to be greatest in programs that sourced food through domestic purchase rather than relying on foreign in-kind donations. To address micronutrient malnutrition, about two-thirds of the programs served fortified foods, and one-quarter included micronutrient supplements. Even as rates of overweight/obesity are rising among African school children, just 10% of school meal programs identified its prevention as an objective. CONCLUSION: The extent to which school meal programs in Africa are supported with domestic funding reflects a dramatic shift in favor of national ownership and domestic food procurement. At the same time, programs have grappled with inadequate and unpredictable budgets and challenges related to supply chains and logistics—impediments that need to be addressed if these programs are to achieve their objectives. Overall, the survey results underscore the important position of school meal programs within African food systems and their potential (if well-designed) to sustainably improve food security, child health, and nutrition.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-9178184
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2022
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-91781842022-06-10 School Meal Programs in Africa: Regional Results From the 2019 Global Survey of School Meal Programs Wineman, Ayala Ekwueme, Moses C. Bigayimpunzi, Liliane Martin-Daihirou, Alice de Gois V. N. Rodrigues, Eth Ludmilla Etuge, Priscilia Warner, Yale Kessler, Heidi Mitchell, Arlene Front Public Health Public Health INTRODUCTION: School meal programs operate throughout Africa, serving as a social safety net and aiming to improve children's nutrition, influence their dietary choices, and strengthen the agrifood economy through local procurement. Despite their rapid expansion in the past decade, there has been no systematic effort to comprehensively document school feeding activities across the continent. METHODS: Detailed information on school feeding activities in each country was captured in the Global Survey of School Meal Programs©, which launched in 2019. An invitation to participate was extended to each government, which appointed a national-level respondent to gather information on every large-scale school meal program in the country. RESULTS: Forty-one countries in Africa (38 in sub-Saharan Africa) responded to the survey in 2019 with information on 68 large-scale programs that together reached 60.1 million children. Across these countries, the aggregate school feeding budget was USD 1.3 billion. Diversity in school meal programs is evident across regions, country income levels, and levels of national commitment. Coverage rates tended to be highest in southern Africa, in countries with school feeding as a line item in the national budget, and in countries with the greatest domestic share of the school feeding budget. Diversity in the school menu tended to be greatest in programs that sourced food through domestic purchase rather than relying on foreign in-kind donations. To address micronutrient malnutrition, about two-thirds of the programs served fortified foods, and one-quarter included micronutrient supplements. Even as rates of overweight/obesity are rising among African school children, just 10% of school meal programs identified its prevention as an objective. CONCLUSION: The extent to which school meal programs in Africa are supported with domestic funding reflects a dramatic shift in favor of national ownership and domestic food procurement. At the same time, programs have grappled with inadequate and unpredictable budgets and challenges related to supply chains and logistics—impediments that need to be addressed if these programs are to achieve their objectives. Overall, the survey results underscore the important position of school meal programs within African food systems and their potential (if well-designed) to sustainably improve food security, child health, and nutrition. Frontiers Media S.A. 2022-05-26 /pmc/articles/PMC9178184/ /pubmed/35692321 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpubh.2022.871866 Text en Copyright © 2022 Wineman, Ekwueme, Bigayimpunzi, Martin-Daihirou, de Gois V. N. Rodrigues, Etuge, Warner, Kessler and Mitchell. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Public Health
Wineman, Ayala
Ekwueme, Moses C.
Bigayimpunzi, Liliane
Martin-Daihirou, Alice
de Gois V. N. Rodrigues, Eth Ludmilla
Etuge, Priscilia
Warner, Yale
Kessler, Heidi
Mitchell, Arlene
School Meal Programs in Africa: Regional Results From the 2019 Global Survey of School Meal Programs
title School Meal Programs in Africa: Regional Results From the 2019 Global Survey of School Meal Programs
title_full School Meal Programs in Africa: Regional Results From the 2019 Global Survey of School Meal Programs
title_fullStr School Meal Programs in Africa: Regional Results From the 2019 Global Survey of School Meal Programs
title_full_unstemmed School Meal Programs in Africa: Regional Results From the 2019 Global Survey of School Meal Programs
title_short School Meal Programs in Africa: Regional Results From the 2019 Global Survey of School Meal Programs
title_sort school meal programs in africa: regional results from the 2019 global survey of school meal programs
topic Public Health
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9178184/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35692321
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpubh.2022.871866
work_keys_str_mv AT winemanayala schoolmealprogramsinafricaregionalresultsfromthe2019globalsurveyofschoolmealprograms
AT ekwuememosesc schoolmealprogramsinafricaregionalresultsfromthe2019globalsurveyofschoolmealprograms
AT bigayimpunzililiane schoolmealprogramsinafricaregionalresultsfromthe2019globalsurveyofschoolmealprograms
AT martindaihiroualice schoolmealprogramsinafricaregionalresultsfromthe2019globalsurveyofschoolmealprograms
AT degoisvnrodriguesethludmilla schoolmealprogramsinafricaregionalresultsfromthe2019globalsurveyofschoolmealprograms
AT etugepriscilia schoolmealprogramsinafricaregionalresultsfromthe2019globalsurveyofschoolmealprograms
AT warneryale schoolmealprogramsinafricaregionalresultsfromthe2019globalsurveyofschoolmealprograms
AT kesslerheidi schoolmealprogramsinafricaregionalresultsfromthe2019globalsurveyofschoolmealprograms
AT mitchellarlene schoolmealprogramsinafricaregionalresultsfromthe2019globalsurveyofschoolmealprograms