HEALTHY Study School Food Service Revenue and Expense Report

Publication Description
BACKGROUND: Food service directors have a concern that federal reimbursement is not meeting the demands of increasing costs of healthier meals. The purpose of this article is to report the food option changes and the annual revenues and expenses of the school food service environment. METHODS: The HEALTHY study was a 3‐year (2006 to 2009) randomized, cluster‐designed trial conducted in 42 middle schools at 7 field centers. The schools selected had at least 50% of students who were eligible for free or reduced‐price lunch or who belonged to a minority group. A randomly assigned half of the HEALTHY schools received a school health intervention program consisting of 4 integrated components: nutrition, physical activity, behavioral knowledge and skills, and social marketing. The nutrition component consisted of changing the meal plans to meet 5 nutrition goals. Revenue and expense data were collected from income statements, federal meal records, à la carte sale sheets, school store sale sheets, donated money/food records, and vending machines. RESULTS: Although more intervention schools reached the nutritional goals than control schools, revenues and expenses were not significantly different between groups. CONCLUSION: The HEALTHY study showed no adverse effect of school food policies on food service finances.

Primary Author
Treviño,Roberto P.
Pham,Trang
Mobley,Connie
Hartstein,Jill
Ghormli,Laure El
Songer,Thomas

Volume
82

Issue
9

Start Page
417

Other Pages
423

Publisher
Blackwell Publishing Ltd

URL
https://api.istex.fr/ark:/67375/WNG-HBRCCZQ3-3/fulltext.pdf

PMID
22882105

Edition
Received on June 27, 2011, Accepted on January 8, 2012



Reference Type
Journal Article

Periodical Full
The Journal of school health

Publication Year
2012

Publication Date
Sep

Place of Publication
Oxford, UK

ISSN/ISBN
0022-4391

Document Object Index
10.1111/j.1746-1561.2012.00717.x