Impact of competitive foods in public schools on child nutrition: effects on adolescent obesity in the United States an integrative systematic literature review

Background: The United States (US) is currently facing a public health crisis due to the percentage of obesity in adolescents. The Center for Disease Control (CDC) stated the risks for children due to obesity are many. Adolescents obtain a large portion of their daily caloric intake at school; there...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Kirsten E. Sildén
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2018-01-01
Series:Global Health Action
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/16549716.2018.1477492
_version_ 1811260943614607360
author Kirsten E. Sildén
author_facet Kirsten E. Sildén
author_sort Kirsten E. Sildén
collection DOAJ
description Background: The United States (US) is currently facing a public health crisis due to the percentage of obesity in adolescents. The Center for Disease Control (CDC) stated the risks for children due to obesity are many. Adolescents obtain a large portion of their daily caloric intake at school; therefore, what foods/drinks they are consuming is so serious. Objective: To identify and analyze literature on the effects of competitive foods in public schools on adolescent weight, or Body Mass Index (BMI), and possible impacts they may have on adolescent obesity in the United States. Methods: An integrative systematic review of literature was conducted. The literature was collected in CINAHL, MEDLINE and EMBASE databases. Refined keyword search is further detailed in the report. Year restrictions were 2006–2017 from peer-reviewed journals and published in English, including adolescents 13–18 years old in the US. Criteria for inclusion targeted at least one of (1) sugar-sweetened beverages (SSB), (2) competitive foods, (3) commercial foods, (4) vending machines, (5) al a carte venues, and (6) school stores, examining their associations with weight measurements, using either weight or BMI, or caloric intake analysis. Results: A total of 164 articles were detected and assessed, for a final analysis of 34 full text articles. Twenty-six articles met the inclusion criteria. Common aspects of interest involved BMI/Obesity/Weight (73%), (58%) examined Calorie density or consumption, (77%) discussed the Availability of competitive foods in schools, (54%) included Analysis of competitive food, beverage and nutrition policies, and (69%) addressed Other effects. Conclusion: This review discovered substantial evidence that competitive foods are highly available in schools, however, lacking in robust evidence proving causality in increasing BMI or weight. There is strong corroboration in the research revealing that Other effects are factors worthy of studying further. Additional longitudinal and higher-quality research needs to be performed.
first_indexed 2024-04-12T18:55:08Z
format Article
id doaj.art-d06b2921d7f94a39a7ce0e120003ce45
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 1654-9716
1654-9880
language English
last_indexed 2024-04-12T18:55:08Z
publishDate 2018-01-01
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
record_format Article
series Global Health Action
spelling doaj.art-d06b2921d7f94a39a7ce0e120003ce452022-12-22T03:20:22ZengTaylor & Francis GroupGlobal Health Action1654-97161654-98802018-01-0111110.1080/16549716.2018.14774921477492Impact of competitive foods in public schools on child nutrition: effects on adolescent obesity in the United States an integrative systematic literature reviewKirsten E. Sildén0Lund UniversityBackground: The United States (US) is currently facing a public health crisis due to the percentage of obesity in adolescents. The Center for Disease Control (CDC) stated the risks for children due to obesity are many. Adolescents obtain a large portion of their daily caloric intake at school; therefore, what foods/drinks they are consuming is so serious. Objective: To identify and analyze literature on the effects of competitive foods in public schools on adolescent weight, or Body Mass Index (BMI), and possible impacts they may have on adolescent obesity in the United States. Methods: An integrative systematic review of literature was conducted. The literature was collected in CINAHL, MEDLINE and EMBASE databases. Refined keyword search is further detailed in the report. Year restrictions were 2006–2017 from peer-reviewed journals and published in English, including adolescents 13–18 years old in the US. Criteria for inclusion targeted at least one of (1) sugar-sweetened beverages (SSB), (2) competitive foods, (3) commercial foods, (4) vending machines, (5) al a carte venues, and (6) school stores, examining their associations with weight measurements, using either weight or BMI, or caloric intake analysis. Results: A total of 164 articles were detected and assessed, for a final analysis of 34 full text articles. Twenty-six articles met the inclusion criteria. Common aspects of interest involved BMI/Obesity/Weight (73%), (58%) examined Calorie density or consumption, (77%) discussed the Availability of competitive foods in schools, (54%) included Analysis of competitive food, beverage and nutrition policies, and (69%) addressed Other effects. Conclusion: This review discovered substantial evidence that competitive foods are highly available in schools, however, lacking in robust evidence proving causality in increasing BMI or weight. There is strong corroboration in the research revealing that Other effects are factors worthy of studying further. Additional longitudinal and higher-quality research needs to be performed.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/16549716.2018.1477492School health policychild nutritionBody Mass Index (BMI)junk foodfoods of minimal nutritional value(FMNV)commercial foodvending machinessugar-sweetened beveragesal a carte
spellingShingle Kirsten E. Sildén
Impact of competitive foods in public schools on child nutrition: effects on adolescent obesity in the United States an integrative systematic literature review
Global Health Action
School health policy
child nutrition
Body Mass Index (BMI)
junk food
foods of minimal nutritional value
(FMNV)
commercial food
vending machines
sugar-sweetened beverages
al a carte
title Impact of competitive foods in public schools on child nutrition: effects on adolescent obesity in the United States an integrative systematic literature review
title_full Impact of competitive foods in public schools on child nutrition: effects on adolescent obesity in the United States an integrative systematic literature review
title_fullStr Impact of competitive foods in public schools on child nutrition: effects on adolescent obesity in the United States an integrative systematic literature review
title_full_unstemmed Impact of competitive foods in public schools on child nutrition: effects on adolescent obesity in the United States an integrative systematic literature review
title_short Impact of competitive foods in public schools on child nutrition: effects on adolescent obesity in the United States an integrative systematic literature review
title_sort impact of competitive foods in public schools on child nutrition effects on adolescent obesity in the united states an integrative systematic literature review
topic School health policy
child nutrition
Body Mass Index (BMI)
junk food
foods of minimal nutritional value
(FMNV)
commercial food
vending machines
sugar-sweetened beverages
al a carte
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/16549716.2018.1477492
work_keys_str_mv AT kirstenesilden impactofcompetitivefoodsinpublicschoolsonchildnutritioneffectsonadolescentobesityintheunitedstatesanintegrativesystematicliteraturereview