Gingell Tina, Esdaile Emma, Gallegos Danielle
Centre for Childhood Nutrition Research, Queensland University of Technology (QUT), South Brisbane, Australia.
School of Exercise and Nutrition Sciences, Faculty of Health, Queensland University of Technology (QUT), Kelvin Grove, Australia.
PLoS One. 2025 Jul 1;20(7):e0327310. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0327310. eCollection 2025.
Schools are a key environment which can provide access to food, education and skills to enhance food and nutrition literacy and health and wellbeing of primary school students. This review set out to identify key features of school food and nutrition environments (SFNEs) of Australian primary schools, the barriers and enablers for optimising these features, and the impact of school socio-economic status on these features. Six health databases were searched between August 2021 and October 2024. Articles which met the inclusion criteria (n = 148) were selected for a content analysis using a school-system approach. A quality assessment and an in-depth review was then conducted on articles published post 2019 (n = 71). The content analysis identified 18 SFNE elements which were present within the classroom (n = 1), the classroom but externally-operated (n = 1), the school (n = 4), the school but externally operated (n = 6), and other elements external to the school (n = 6). The in-depth analysis revealed a complex interrelationship between these elements and the actors within these elements (students, parents, school staff, volunteers, organisations, community members, and government). As societal and school expectations evolved, this impacted the SFNE. Numerous enablers and barriers to food and nutrition education, student food consumption, and government and school policies were identified, which could be leveraged to optimise SFNEs. Fewer than a quarter of the articles considered the effect of socio-economic factors on the identified SFNE elements. SFNEs are complex, made up of numerous overlapping structural and relational elements. At the local level, the SFNE of every school is unique and school stakeholders (students, parents, school leaders and teachers) should be centralised in the development of local, contextualised strategies to improve their SFNE. State and national resourcing needs to consider financial support as well as time/capacity, personnel, expertise, and curriculum embedment.
学校是一个关键环境,能够提供获取食物、教育和技能的机会,以提高小学生的食品和营养知识水平以及健康和幸福感。本综述旨在确定澳大利亚小学学校食品和营养环境(SFNE)的关键特征、优化这些特征的障碍和促进因素,以及学校社会经济地位对这些特征的影响。在2021年8月至2024年10月期间检索了六个健康数据库。采用学校系统方法,对符合纳入标准的文章(n = 148)进行内容分析。然后对2019年后发表的文章(n = 71)进行质量评估和深入审查。内容分析确定了18个SFNE要素,这些要素存在于教室(n = 1)、教室但由外部运营(n = 1)、学校(n = 4)、学校但由外部运营(n = 6)以及学校外部的其他要素(n = 6)中。深入分析揭示了这些要素与这些要素中的行为者(学生、家长、学校工作人员、志愿者、组织、社区成员和政府)之间复杂的相互关系。随着社会和学校期望的演变,这对SFNE产生了影响。确定了食品和营养教育、学生食品消费以及政府和学校政策的众多促进因素和障碍,可利用这些因素优化SFNE。不到四分之一的文章考虑了社会经济因素对已确定的SFNE要素的影响。SFNE很复杂,由许多重叠的结构和关系要素组成。在地方层面,每所学校的SFNE都是独特的,学校利益相关者(学生、家长、学校领导和教师)应在制定因地制宜的地方战略以改善其SFNE方面发挥核心作用。州和国家的资源配置需要考虑财政支持以及时间/能力、人员、专业知识和课程嵌入等方面。