Students with less than 20 minutes to eat school lunches
consume significantly less of their entrées, milk, and vegetables than
those who aren’t as rushed, according to a new study from Harvard T.H.
Chan School of Public Health.
“Many children, especially those from low-income families, rely on
school meals for up to half their daily energy intake so it is essential
that we give students a sufficient amount of time to eat their
lunches,” said Juliana Cohen, adjunct assistant professor in the Department of Nutrition
at Harvard Chan School, assistant professor in the Department of Health
Sciences at Merrimack College, and lead author of the study.
“Every school day the National School Lunch Program helps to feed
over 30 million children in 100,000 schools across the U.S., yet little
research has been done in this field,” said Eric Rimm, professor of epidemiology and nutrition at Harvard Chan School and the study’s senior author.
While recent federal guidelines enhanced the nutritional quality of
school lunches, there are no standards regarding lunch period length.
Many students have lunch periods that are 20 minutes or less, which can
be an insufficient amount of time to eat, according to the authors.
The researchers wanted to examine the effect of lunch period length
on students’ food choices and intake. They looked at 1,001 students in
six elementary and middle schools, with lunch periods ranging from 20-30
minutes, in a low-income urban school district in Massachusetts, as
part of the Modifying Eating and Lifestyles at School (MEALS) study, a
collaboration between Project Bread and Harvard Chan School. They
analyzed the students’ food selection and consumption by monitoring what
was left on their plates at the end of the lunch period.
The researchers found that students with less than 20 minutes to eat
lunch consumed 13% less of their entrées, 12% less of their vegetables,
and 10% less of their milk than students who had at least 25 minutes to
eat. While there were no notable differences between the groups in terms
of entrée, milk, or vegetable selections, those with less time to eat
were significantly less likely to select a fruit (44% vs. 57%). Also,
there was more food waste among groups with less time to eat.
Waiting in serving lines or arriving late to lunch sometimes left
children in the study with as little as 10 minutes to actually sit and
eat. The researchers acknowledged that while not all schools may be able
to lengthen their lunch periods, they could develop strategies to move
kids more quickly through lunch lines, such as by adding more serving
lines or setting up automated checkout systems.
“We were surprised by some of the results because I expected that
with less time children may quickly eat their entrée and drink their
milk but throw away all of their fruits and vegetables,” said Rimm. “Not
so—we found they got a start on everything, but couldn’t come close to
finishing with less time to eat.”
“Amount of Time to Eat Lunch Is Associated with Children’s Selection
and Consumption of School Meal Entrée, Fruits, Vegetables, and Milk,”
Juliana F. W. Cohen, Jaquelyn L. Jahn, Scott Richardson, Sarah A.
Cluggish, Ellen Parker, Eric B. Rimm, Journal of the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics, online September 11, 2015, doi: 10.1016/j.jand.2015.07.019
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