Title: HEALTHY SCHOOL NUTRITION ENVIRONMENTS a blueprint
1HEALTHY SCHOOL NUTRITION ENVIRONMENTS a blueprint
- MPESA AGM
- September 14, 2006
- Pat Bugera-Krawchuk, RD Dairy Farmers of MB
- Corinne Eisenbraun, RD Dietitians of Canada
2Today well look at
- What school nutrition policy is and why its
important - National and provincial perspectives
- Provincial process leading to development of
- Manitoba School Nutrition Handbook
- Process, partners, status
- Vending
- Making your policy work
3Why is School Nutrition Policy Important?
4A Day in the life of Andrea
- Monday Andreas 7th birthday mom brings donuts
for the whole class - Tuesday bake sale day buys cupcake at 1130
- Wednesday Special Food Day pizza pops, chips
and pop on the menu - Thursday ski trip is cancelled. The principal
makes up for the cancellation with pop and chips
for everyone - Friday Valentines Day class celebration with
candy and cake
5School Nutrition Policy is important because
- Education and health are intimately linked
- Students spend as much time at school as in any
other environment - Next to parents, schools have the most impact on
shaping childrens eating habits - Students typically have at least one snack or
meal at school per day
6School Nutrition Policy
- creates supportive school environments for
healthy food choices designed to - improve the nutritional intake of students
- provide students an opportunity to practice what
they learn in the classroom - demonstrate that schools value student health
- contribute to the primary prevention of chronic
disease
7A Nutrition Policy is
- a statement of philosophy and belief
- established to make healthy choices the easy
choices - a way to ensure that good nutrition is promoted
both in theory and in practice - direction for action
8 9National Action on School Nutrition
- Policies/ guidelines included in formal
provincial Healthy Living Strategies NS, BC, NL - Departmental policy on school food - NB
- Coalitions working on policies/ guidelines with
provincial support PEI, AB - Policies left to individual districts or interest
groups SK, ON, PQ
10Manitoba School Nutrition
- The Provincial Government has taken a middle of
the road approach - Provision of direction, tools, resources with
reporting requirements, but very firm that an
one size fits all will not work - Commitment to move forward through reporting
requirements
11Provincial All Party Task Force Healthy Kids,
Healthy Futures
- Public consultations between January and March
2005 - Report released June 2005 which included 47
recommendations - Provincial government accepted all
recommendations and made commitment to act upon
them - http//www.gov.mb.ca/healthykids/index.html
12Task Force Nutrition Recommendations
- All schools to have a written school food and
nutrition policy - The Province will provide model policy statements
as examples to help schools or school divisions
to develop specifics to suit local needs - The Province will provide Guidelines for Foods
Served at Schools as well as a series of tools
and resource - Schools will be required to report annually to
parent advisory councils and Manitoba Education,
Citizenship and Youth on actions taken on
nutrition - Phased in over a period of two years beginning in
the 2006-2007 school year
13Manitoba Council for Child Nutrition
- Vending Demonstration Project in 8 schools across
the province all (3) high schools in one
district - Seeking to determine the products and features
that will support healthier choices in vending
machines and an assessment of the financial
impact of those changes
14Dietitians of Canada
- Provincial consultation with a selected number of
schools to inform development of the Nutrition
Handbook - Development of tools and resources
- Co-ordinate a provincial survey of current school
food environments
15http//www.gov.mb.ca/healthyschools/report.html
16School Consultation Key Findings
- The guidelines should include a clear direction
or goal including reasons for the guidelines,
and parent information - The guidelines need to be flexible and provide a
defined range of food choices, allowing schools
to make decisions to fit with local needs - Practical guidelines that outlines a simple set
of standards regarding foods served and sold in
schools.
17Development of Draft Handbook
- Based on consultation input, literature review,
key informant interviews across Canada - Draft reviewed by RDs across MB
- Sent to all publicly funded schools late April
Released for public input May 17 Special notices
sent to key agencies and education NGO - http//www.gov.mb.ca/healthyliving/handbook.html
18Handbook status
- Text has been designed, reviewed and signoff
expected shortly for printing - French translation underway
- Handbook will be released in hard copy and
electronically shortly
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21Guidelines
- Based on Nutritional criteria and Canadas Food
Guide to Healthy Eating plus one additional
section on beverages - Include
- What to check for on labels to choose the
healthiest options - What an appropriate serving size looks like
- Lists of choices to serve most often, sometimes
and rarely - Lists products that are better choices for
canteens and vending machines - Provides tips for makings choices more nutritious
22Food Environment Survey
- Sent to all schools with the draft guidelines
550 79 were completed and returned. - Manitoba schools across the province are well
represented in the results. - Data undergone data clean up and has been scanned
and prepared for analysis. - Report is anticipated by mid-autumn
23Top ten foods sold in schools (draft)
Cafeterias Canteens
- Chocolate milk
- Sandwiches/wraps
- Cookies
- Pizza
- French fries
- Soft drinks
- Soup
- 100 fruit juice
- Water
- White milk
- Chocolate milk
- Candy
- Pizza
- Chips
- Hotdogs
- Chocolate bars
- Soft drinks
- Ice cream
- 100 fruit juice
- Water
24Vending (draft)
- 55 of schools had vending machines
- Prime rationale for vending
- 62 Service to students
- 13 Fundraising
- 12 service to staff
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26Making Your Policy Work
- Involve as many representatives of the school
community as possible in policy development - Superintendents
- School Trustees
- Administrators
- Teachers (phys ed, Food Nutrition, etc.)
- Parents
- Students
- Dietitian
27Making Your Policy Work
- The policy should cover all foods and beverages
served or sold within the school and at/for
school sponsored activities - The policy should be widely publicized and apply
to students,student organizations, staff and
meal/snack providers - Educate staff and students
28Policies Can Cover
- Foods available at special events
- Commercial vending/catering contracts
- Cafeterias and canteens
- Nutrition education for students/staff
- Using food as reward
- Fundraising
29Policies Can Cover
- Food packaging and waste
- Food Security
- Eating environments
- Role modeling
- Support of local food producers
- And many more, depending on the issues identified
by your school/division
30Yes, but
- Early Years The biggest problem is what students
bring from home schools cant tell parents what
to do - Middle Years Students arent interested in
healthier options - Senior Years What about the loss of revenue from
vending machines? Students will just go off
campus to get what they want.
31Things to consider
- Change takes time
- Allow for phased in implementation
- Make action plans realistic start where you are
likely to succeed - Monitor and evaluate changes
- Celebrate success
32MB Reporting Requirements
- As per letter from MECY to schools in May 2006,
schools will be required to include reporting on
nutrition policies beginning in the 2007/08
school plan - Final reporting tool is under development
- Planning for it to be a simple process
33Next steps
- Distribution of the Handbook in English and
French to all schools and significant
stakeholders - A series of workshops to assist in the
application and implementation of the nutrition
policies between late October and late March - A 1-800 and e-mail assistance lines from early
October to the end of May - Collaborative support from Dairy Farmers of
Manitoba, Manitoba Council for Child Nutrition
and Dietitians of Canada
34Resources
- www.ssta.sk.ca/EducationServices/ResearchAndDevelo
pment/ResearchReports/StudentsDiverseNeeds/04-01.p
df (Defining nutritious and non-nutritious food,
pricing and promotion, fundraising, food
security, food service contracts) - www.gov.pe.ca/peihea/index.php3?number1005084lan
gE (special events) - www.gnb.ca/oooo/policies.asp under Health
Safety heading (pricing and promotion) - http//www.osnpph.on.ca/pdfs/call_to_action.pdf (C
all to Action Creating a Healthy School
Nutrition Environment)