Parents face several barriers in providing a healthy school lunch for their primary school children: A survey of Victorian (Australian) parents

IF 1.4 4区 医学 Q3 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH Health Promotion Journal of Australia Pub Date : 2024-01-18 DOI:10.1002/hpja.842
Janandani Nanayakkara, Claire Margerison, Alison O. Booth, Anthony Worsley, Gozde Aydin
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Issue Addressed

This paper aims to explore Victoria parents' perceptions of their current practices and barriers in providing school lunches for their primary school children.

Methods

Respondents were asked via an online survey about their lunch provision practices, perceptions of the healthiness of school lunches, and barriers to providing healthy school lunches. Data were analysed using different statistical techniques: Chi-square test, Spearman correlation analysis, Mann–Whitney U test, and Kruskal–Wallis test.

Results

In total, 359 respondents completed the survey. Most respondents (84%) reported their child takes a home-packed lunch to school every day. Most respondents provided fruits (94%), vegetables (57%), and sandwiches (54%) every day for school lunches, whilst other core food items such as milk, meats, and legumes were provided less frequently. A substantial proportion of respondents provided some discretionary food items frequently (e.g., the proportion of respondents providing selected discretionary food items daily or 3–4 times/week: salty crackers—50%, sweet cookies/biscuits—40%, chips—20%). Respondents strongly agreed or agreed with several barriers; examples include not packing certain foods due to food spoilage concerns (50%) (school-related), the allocated time at their child's school is not enough to eat and enjoy school lunch (48%) (school-related), need more meal ideas (61%) (parent-related), healthy foods take more time to prepare (51%) (parent-related), and children request easy-to-eat food for school lunches (50%) (child-related). Core food score (an indicator of frequency of preparing/packing core food) was negatively correlated with parent-related and child-related barrier scores, whilst discretionary food score (an indicator of frequency of preparing/packing discretionary food) was positively correlated with these barrier scores.

Conclusions

Overall, home-packed lunches remain the main option in primary schools in Victoria, and parents face several challenges in providing healthy lunches for their primary school children.

So What?

The findings suggest the need for strategies from school leaders, education authorities, and policymakers to improve the quality of lunch content and address the barriers faced by parents.

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在为小学生提供健康的学校午餐方面,家长们面临着一些障碍:对维多利亚州(澳大利亚)家长的调查。
所涉及的问题:本文旨在探讨维多利亚州家长对目前为其小学生提供学校午餐的做法和障碍的看法:方法:通过在线调查向受访者了解他们提供午餐的做法、对学校午餐健康程度的看法以及提供健康学校午餐的障碍。采用不同的统计技术对数据进行分析:结果:共有 359 名受访者完成了调查。大多数受访者(84%)表示,他们的孩子每天都会在家里带午餐上学。大多数受访者每天在学校午餐中提供水果(94%)、蔬菜(57%)和三明治(54%),而提供牛奶、肉类和豆类等其他核心食品的频率较低。相当比例的受访者经常提供一些自选食品(例如,每天或每周 3-4 次提供选定自选食品的受访者比例:咸饼干-50%、甜饼干/饼干-40%、薯片-20%)。受访者非常同意或同意几种障碍,例如:因担心食物变质而不包装某些食物(50%)(与学校有关)、孩子在学校的时间不足以享用学校午餐(48%)(与学校有关)、需要更多的膳食创意(61%)(与家长有关)、准备健康食品需要更多时间(51%)(与家长有关)、孩子要求学校午餐提供易消化的食物(50%)(与孩子有关)。核心食物得分(准备/包装核心食物频率的指标)与家长和儿童相关障碍得分呈负相关,而随意食物得分(准备/包装随意食物频率的指标)与这些障碍得分呈正相关:总体而言,家庭打包午餐仍然是维多利亚州小学的主要选择,家长在为小学生提供健康午餐方面面临着一些挑战。所以呢?研究结果表明,学校领导、教育当局和政策制定者需要采取策略,提高午餐内容的质量,解决家长面临的障碍。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Health Promotion Journal of Australia
Health Promotion Journal of Australia PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH-
CiteScore
3.10
自引率
10.50%
发文量
115
期刊介绍: The purpose of the Health Promotion Journal of Australia is to facilitate communication between researchers, practitioners, and policymakers involved in health promotion activities. Preference for publication is given to practical examples of policies, theories, strategies and programs which utilise educational, organisational, economic and/or environmental approaches to health promotion. The journal also publishes brief reports discussing programs, professional viewpoints, and guidelines for practice or evaluation methodology. The journal features articles, brief reports, editorials, perspectives, "of interest", viewpoints, book reviews and letters.
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