Institute of Applied Health Research, University Birmingham, Birmingham, UK.
Institute of Global Sustainable Development, University of Warwick, Coventry, UK.
BMC Public Health. 2024 Jul 23;24(1):1970. doi: 10.1186/s12889-024-19513-7.
Typical adolescent diets do not meet current dietary recommendations. There is a need to address these dietary patterns to reduce the risk of obesity and other diet-related diseases. Schools provide an opportune setting to do so, as students consume a substantial proportion of their daily dietary intake whilst at school. There is a developing evidence base on the use of choice architecture (food choice cues) to promote healthy eating in school contexts. It is necessary to understand the acceptability and feasibility of implementing such interventions. We aimed to explore these factors from the perspectives of secondary school caterers.
We conducted qualitative interviews with caterers from secondary schools across the West Midlands, UK and national/regional catering representatives. A semi-structured topic guide and visual aid were used to guide interviews. Interviews were recorded and transcribed. Framework analysis was conducted in NVivo v12.
Twelve participants took part. Seven themes were identified and grouped into three categories: Acceptability (Suitability; Salient cues; Student engagement), Barriers (Catering decision drivers; Limits of influence), and Enablers (Perceived role; Opportunities). Caterers considered healthy food cues to be suited to adolescents as they require minimal reflective motivation. Salient cues included enhancing the placement, presentation and portability of healthy items, improving the dining environment and focusing pricing/incentive strategies on increased quantity. Student engagement was considered important. Some catering decision drivers conflicted with healthy food cues, and many felt that their role in healthy eating was limited due to the overwhelming influence of external food environments, adolescent resistance, and features of the secondary school canteen setting e.g. short duration of lunchtime, lack of space. However, caterers appeared motivated to implement healthy food cues and identified key opportunities for implementation, including integration into whole-school approaches to healthy eating.
Interventions using healthy food cues appeared acceptable to secondary school caterers, key potential implementers of these strategies. Future interventions could incorporate strategies relating to placement, presentation and pricing to prompt healthy selections, and actions to engage the student body and improve the dining environment. Evaluations should consider potential impacts upon food purchasing, consumption and waste to address caterers' concerns about these issues.
典型的青少年饮食不符合当前的饮食建议。需要解决这些饮食模式,以降低肥胖和其他与饮食相关的疾病的风险。学校提供了一个合适的环境,可以在学生在校期间摄入大量日常饮食的同时做到这一点。在学校环境中使用选择架构(食物选择提示)来促进健康饮食的证据基础正在发展。有必要了解实施此类干预措施的可接受性和可行性。我们的目的是从中学餐饮人员的角度探讨这些因素。
我们对英国西米德兰兹郡各中学的餐饮人员以及国家/地区餐饮代表进行了定性访谈。使用半结构化主题指南和视觉辅助工具来指导访谈。访谈进行了录音和转录。在 NVivo v12 中进行了框架分析。
共有 12 名参与者参加。确定了七个主题,并分为三类:可接受性(适宜性;明显提示;学生参与)、障碍(餐饮决策驱动因素;影响力限制)和促进因素(感知角色;机会)。餐饮人员认为健康食品提示适合青少年,因为他们不需要反思动机。明显的提示包括增强健康物品的位置、展示和便携性,改善就餐环境,并将定价/激励策略集中在增加数量上。学生参与被认为很重要。一些餐饮决策驱动因素与健康食品提示相冲突,许多人认为由于外部食物环境、青少年的抵制以及中学食堂环境的特点(例如午餐时间短、缺乏空间)的压倒性影响,他们在健康饮食方面的作用有限。然而,餐饮人员似乎有动力实施健康食品提示,并确定了实施的关键机会,包括将其纳入全校健康饮食方法中。
使用健康食品提示的干预措施似乎被中学餐饮人员接受,他们是这些策略的主要潜在实施者。未来的干预措施可以纳入与位置、展示和定价相关的策略,以促使选择健康食品,并采取行动吸引学生群体并改善就餐环境。评估应考虑这些问题对食品采购、消费和浪费的潜在影响,以解决餐饮人员对这些问题的担忧。