Schools can play an important part in the national effort to prevent childhood obesity. More than 95 percent of American youth aged 5 to 17 are enrolled in school, and no other institution has as much continuous and intensive contact with children during the first two decades of life. Schools can promote good nutrition, physical activity, and healthy body weight among children through healthful school meals and foods, physical education programs and recess, classroom health education, and school health services. In this article, school food and physical activity environments are analyzed, and federal, state, and local policies related to food and physical activity standards in schools are examined. Recommendations for school-based efforts to advance obesity prevention are also discussed.
Keywords: Academic achievement, Body mass index (BMI), Commodity foods, Competitive foods, Food service, Nutrition standards, Physical activity, School meal programs, Snacks, Sugar-sweetened beverages, Vending machines
Age Groups: Adolescents (grades 9 to 12), Adults and Families, Elementary-age children (grades K to 5), Young adolescents (grades 6 to 8)
Resource Type: Journal Article
State: National
Focus Areas: Nutrition Policy & Programs, School & After School
Related Research
November 2024
Experiences with COVID-19 economic relief measures among low-wage worker families: a qualitative study
This study aimed to understand experiences with COVID-19 economic relief measures among low-wage worker households with children during the COVID-19 pandemic. The study conducted semi-structured qualitative interviews from low-wage workers in households with children in two U.S. cities in 2022 (n = 40). The sample was recruited from a larger study which included survey measures MoreNovember 2024
School-based nutrition education programs alone are not cost effective for preventing childhood obesity: a microsimulation study
Although interventions to change nutrition policies, systems, and environments (PSE) for children are generally cost effective for preventing childhood obesity, existing evidence suggests that nutrition education curricula, without accompanying PSE changes, are more commonly implemented. This study aimed to estimate the societal costs and potential for cost-effectiveness of 3 nutrition education curricula frequently implemented in MoreJune 2024