4.3 Article

School lunch nutritional adequacy: what is served, consumed and wasted

Journal

PUBLIC HEALTH NUTRITION
Volume 24, Issue 13, Pages 4277-4285

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/S1368980020004607

Keywords

Dietary guidelines; Food consumption; Food offer; Plate waste; School lunch

Funding

  1. FCT - Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology [UIDB/50016/2020, UIDB/05748/2020, UIDP/05748/2020, UIDB/04033/2020]

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The study found that school lunches in Portuguese public primary schools did not meet dietary guidelines for energy and nutrients, with issues including inadequacies in energy, protein, and carbohydrates, as well as insufficient fiber and micronutrient content. Additionally, children wasted a significant amount of the energy, protein, and carbohydrate content provided in lunches, further impacting their nutrient intake.
Objective: To determine nutritional adequacy of school lunch and to assess the impact of food waste on nutrient intake of primary schoolchildren. Design: The weighing method was used for evaluating initial servings and plate waste for lunch. Energy and nutritional contents of meals served, consumed and wasted were estimated using the software Food Processor Plus. The mean nutritional value of food served and consumed was compared with dietary guidelines. Setting: Portuguese public primary schools in the city of Porto. Participants: All 525 fourth-grade children, aged from 9 to 10 years old, attending to twenty-one public primary schools. Results: Overall, school lunches served did not meet the dietary guidelines for energy and nutrients, as only 12 center dot 5 % of the evaluated meals were adequate for energy, 33 center dot 5 % for proteins, 11 center dot 9 % for carbohydrates and 57 center dot 1 % for lipids. The majority of meals served were below the age-specific lower limit, namely for energy (83 center dot 7 %) and carbohydrates (86 center dot 8 %). The only exception, also unbalanced, was observed for proteins, as 42 center dot 4 % of lunches served exceeded the recommended upper limit. Furthermore, lunches served and consumed by children did not meet the dietary guidelines for fibre and for the micronutrients evaluated. Children wasted 26 % of the energy content provided in lunches, corresponding to 91 center dot 5 kcal, 25 % of proteins and 29 % of carbohydrates supplied. Conclusions: The lunches served and consumed by children at school canteens failed to meet nutritional standards. These results are not only a consequence of inadequate food portions served but also a result of the high plate waste values observed.

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