Dec. 7 - Kids Eat More Fruits, Vegetables When Schools Offer
Salad Bar
A new UCLA study has found that elementary schools
can significantly increase the frequency of fruit and vegetable
consumption among low-income students by providing a lunch salad
bar.
The findings, published in the December issue
of the international peer-reviewed journal Public
Health Nutrition, show that the frequency of students'
fruit and vegetable consumption increased significantly —
from 2.97 to 4.09 times daily — after a salad bar was
introduced. In addition, students' mean daily intake of energy,
cholesterol, saturated fat and total fat declined considerably.
"One of the major contributing factors
to the high rate of overweight children in the United States
is that they do not consume the daily recommended servings of
fruits and vegetables," said lead author Dr. Wendy Slusser,
assistant professor of pediatrics at Mattel Children's Hospital
UCLA and the UCLA School of Public Health. "Increasing
the availability and accessibility to healthy foods is one way
to improve children's diets. In turn, this sets up opportunities
for kids to have repeated exposure to healthy food and positively
impact their choices."
The UCLA pilot study was conducted at three
Los Angeles Unified School District elementary schools participating
in the salad bar program and the U.S. Department of Agriculture's
reimbursable lunch program. Study participants included 337
children in grades 2 through 5. Children were interviewed using
a 24-hour food-recall questionnaire, both before and after the
salad bar intervention — in 1998 and 2000, respectively.
The study was offered in conjunction with a
nutritional education component, including a school assembly
to teach children about the proper etiquette of serving themselves
salad and picking a well-balanced lunch, as well as an artwork
project and visits to farmers markets or a farm. The salad bar
program was developed together by LAUSD Food Services and Occidental
College in Los Angeles.
"The results are clear — if we provide
fresh fruits and vegetables in kid-friendly ways, we will increase
consumption," said school board member Marlene Canter.
"I am excited to see that our efforts to find new and creative
ways to improve our students' nutrition and help reduce obesity
are working."
Since the study, the LAUSD school board voted
positively on a 2003 obesity-prevention motion that includes
recommending fruit and vegetable bars as a modification of the
hot lunch program.
An important source of nutrition, fruits and
vegetables help with weight management and can also be beneficial
in reducing the risk of certain cancers, heart disease, stroke
and Type 2 diabetes. Eating a variety of fruits and vegetables
can improve health by increasing amounts of vitamin C, phytonutrients,
potassium and fiber in the body and displacing energy-dense
fatty foods.
The U.S.D.A. has reported that only 36.4 percent
of U.S. children between the ages of 2 and 19 eat the recommended
three to five servings of vegetables per day, and only 26 percent
eat the two to four recommended daily servings of fruit.
"The salad bar program showed us that children
will indeed eat more fruits and vegetables if offered in an
appetizing and accessible manner," Slusser said. "Future
studies should evaluate parent education with school lunch menu
changes, as well as why boys are less likely to eat from the
salad bar at lunch than girls."
Source: UCLA Health Sciences
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