A Noor Ramadhani, Paulo Heavenlight A, Shinde Sachin, Tadesse Amare W, Tinkasimile Amani, Hussen Yemisrach, Ngeba Joyce, Sherfi Huda, Drysdale Roisin, Mwanyika-Sando Mary, Codjia Patrick, Chitekwe Stanley, Bärnighausen Till, Sharma Deepika, Fawzi Wafaie W
United Nations Children's Funds, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
Department of Biostatistics and Epidemiology, Muhimbili University of Health and Allied Sciences, Dar es Salaam, Tanzania.
Matern Child Nutr. 2025 Jul;21 Suppl 1:e13614. doi: 10.1111/mcn.13614. Epub 2024 Aug 1.
Schools are increasingly regarded as a key setting for promoting the health, well-being, and development of children and adolescents. In this multicountry cross-sectional survey, we describe the health, nutrition, and food environments of public primary schools in five urban settings in Africa region: Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso; Addis Ababa, Ethiopia; Durban; South Africa, Khartoum, Sudan; and, Dar es Salaam, Tanzania. We evaluated the school health and nutrition (SHN) environments in three main areas: (1) the availability of health-related policies, guidelines, and school curricula, (2) the provision of health, nutrition, and water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH) services in schools, and (3) the school food environments and eating habits of adolescents. We used stratified random sampling to recruit 79 schools from five countries. Trained fieldworkers collected standardized questionnaire data from 79 school administrators, 765 food vendors, and 4999 in-school adolescents aged 10-15 years. In our study, 24 out of 79 school administrators were aware of their school's health-related policies and guidelines while 30 schools had a specific SHN curriculum. In general, health, nutrition, and WASH services were inadequate. Possibly due to a lack of school kitchens, 14.4% of students bought snacks and unhealthy foods from food vendors. Our study indicates that schools' food and nutrition environments are insufficient to improve adolescent health and nutrition in the African region, including limited coverage of SHN policies, suboptimal facilities and nutrition services, and unregulated food environments. Schools in sub-Saharan Africa need to improve their health and nutrition environments.
学校越来越被视为促进儿童和青少年健康、福祉及发展的关键场所。在这项多国横断面调查中,我们描述了非洲地区五个城市环境中公立小学的健康、营养和食物环境:布基纳法索瓦加杜古;埃塞俄比亚亚的斯亚贝巴;南非德班;苏丹喀土穆;以及坦桑尼亚达累斯萨拉姆。我们在三个主要领域评估了学校健康与营养(SHN)环境:(1)与健康相关的政策、指南和学校课程的可用性;(2)学校提供的健康、营养及水、环境卫生和个人卫生(WASH)服务;(3)学校食物环境及青少年的饮食习惯。我们采用分层随机抽样从五个国家招募了79所学校。经过培训的实地工作人员收集了来自79名学校管理人员、765名食品摊贩以及4999名10至15岁在校青少年的标准化问卷调查数据。在我们的研究中,79名学校管理人员中有24人知晓其学校与健康相关的政策和指南,而30所学校有特定的SHN课程。总体而言,健康、营养和WASH服务不足。可能由于缺乏学校厨房,14.4%的学生从食品摊贩那里购买零食和不健康食品。我们的研究表明,非洲地区学校的食物和营养环境不足以改善青少年的健康和营养状况,包括SHN政策覆盖范围有限、设施和营养服务欠佳以及食物环境缺乏监管。撒哈拉以南非洲的学校需要改善其健康和营养环境。