AI Article Synopsis

  • School nutrition programs aim to improve access to healthy foods in schools but face challenges due to varying kitchen and cafeteria infrastructure.
  • A study analyzed data from 1804 schools in NYC and found that factors like co-location, overcrowding, and cafeteria capacity significantly influenced meal participation and scheduling.
  • Poor infrastructure can create disparities in access to these nutrition programs, highlighting the need for improvements to ensure equity across all schools.

Article Abstract

School nutrition programs (SNP) provide much needed access to fruits, vegetables, and other healthy foods at low or no cost. Yet, the infrastructure of school kitchens and cafeteria vary across schools, potentially contributing to systematic barriers for SNP operation and equity. The purpose of this paper is to examine the association between school infrastructure and outcomes including meal participation, untraditional lunch periods, and having an open campus. Regression analyses were conducted using administrative data for 1804 schools and school nutrition manager survey data ( = 821) in New York City (NYC). Co-location was significantly associated with open campus status (OR = 2.84, CI: 1.11, 7.26) and high school breakfast participation (β = -0.056, = 0.003). Overcrowding was associated with breakfast (elementary: β = -0.046, = 0.03; middle: β = 0.051, = 0.04; high: β = 0.042, = 0.04) and lunch participation (elementary: β = -0.031, = 0.01) and untraditional lunchtimes (elementary: OR = 2.47, CI: 1.05, 5.83). Higher enrollment to cafeteria capacity ratios was associated with breakfast (elementary: β = -0.025, = 0.02) and lunch (elementary: β = -0.015, = 0.001; high: β = 0.014, = 0.02) participation and untraditional lunchtimes (middle: OR = 1.66, CI: 1.03, 2.68). Infrastructure characteristics are an important source of variation across NYC schools that may hinder the equity of school nutrition programs across the city.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9368604PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19159649DOI Listing

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