| Literature DB >> 31963692 |
Karin Höijer1, Caroline Lindö1, Arwa Mustafa1, Maria Nyberg1, Viktoria Olsson1, Elisabet Rothenberg1, Hanna Sepp1, Karin Wendin1,2.
Abstract
The world is facing a number of challenges related to food consumption. These are, on the one hand, health effects and, on the other hand, the environmental impact of food production. Radical changes are needed to achieve a sustainable and healthy food production and consumption. Public and institutional meals play a vital role in promoting health and sustainability, since they are responsible for a significant part of food consumption, as well as their "normative influence" on peoples' food habits. The aim of this paper is to provide an explorative review of the scientific literature, focusing on European research including both concepts of health and sustainability in studies of public meals. Of >3000 papers, 20 were found to satisfy these criteria and were thus included in the review. The results showed that schools and hospitals are the most dominant arenas where both health and sustainability have been addressed. Three different approaches in combining health and sustainability have been found, these are: "Health as embracing sustainability", "Sustainability as embracing health" and "Health and sustainability as separate concepts". However, a clear motivation for addressing both health and sustainability is most often missing.Entities:
Keywords: Europe; health; public meals; sustainability
Year: 2020 PMID: 31963692 PMCID: PMC7014417 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph17020621
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1The figure illustrates different sectors serving meals to users. The sizes of the boxes correspond to the number of meals served in each arena, based on a Swedish context [33,34,35].
Databases for search of papers.
| Academic Search Premier |
|---|
| Cinahl Complete |
| Education Research Complete |
| ERIC |
| Medline |
| PubMed |
| SAGE Journals Online |
| Taylor & Francis Online |
| Web of Science |
| Wiley Online Library |
| Scopus |
Criteria for inclusion of papers.
| Written on Studies and by Researchers Based in Europe |
|---|
| Based on title and abstract, cover both the perspectives health and sustainability |
| Concern with public meals. |
| Full text and in English |
| Peer reviewed |
| Published 2008–2018 |
The 20 articles on health and sustainability in public meals fulfilling the five criteria for inclusion in this study.
| No. | Reference |
|---|---|
| No 1. | Jones, M.; Dailami, N.; Weitkamp, E.; Salmon, D.; Kimberlee, R.; Morley, A.; Orme, J. Food sustainability education as a route to healthier eating: evaluation of a multi-component school programme in English primary schools. |
| No 2. | Oostindjer, M.; Aschemann-Witzel, J.; Wang, Q.; Skuland, S.E.; Egelandsdal, B.; Amdam, G.V; Schjøll, A.; Pachucki, M.C.; Rozin, P.; Stein, J.; et al. Are school meals a viable and sustainable tool to improve the healthiness and sustainability of children’s diet and food consumption? A cross-national comparative perspective. |
| No 3. | Jones, M.; Pitt, H.; Oxford, L.; Bray, I.; Kimberlee, R.; Orme, J. Association between Food for Life, a whole setting healthy and sustainable food programme, and primary school children’s consumption of fruit and vegetables: a cross-sectional study in England. |
| No 4. | Balzaretti, C.M.; Ventura, V.; Ratti, S.; Ferrazzi, G.; Spallina, A.; Carruba, M.O.; Castrica, M. Improving the overall sustainability of the school meal chain: the role of portion sizes. |
| No 5. | Saxe, H.; Loftager Okkels, S.; Jensen, J. How to obtain forty percent less environmental impact by healthy, protein-optimized snacks for older adults. |
| No 6. | Wickramasinghe, K.; Rayner, M.; Goldacre, M.; Townsend, N.; Scarborough, P. Environmental and nutrition impact of achieving new School Food Plan recommendations in the primary school meals sector in England. |
| No 7. | Engelmann, T.; Speck, M.; Rohn, H.; Bienge, K.; Langen, N.; Howell, E.; Göbel, C.; Friedrich, S.; Teitscheid, P.; Bowry, J.; et al. Sustainability assessment of out-of-home meals: potentials and challenges of applying the indicator sets NAHGAST meal-basic and NAHGAST meal-pro. |
| No 8. | Gray, S.; Orme, J.; Pitt, H.; Jones, M. Food for Life: evaluation of the impact of the Hospital Food Programme in England using a case study approach. |
| No 9. | He, C.; Mikkelsen, B.E. The association between organic school food policy and school food environment: results from an observational study in Danish schools. |
| No 10. | Sonnino, R.; McWilliam, S. Food waste, catering practices and public procurement: A case study of hospital food systems in Wales. |
| No 11. | Thorsen, A.V.; Lassen, A.D.; Andersen, E.W.; Christensen, L.M.; Biltoft-Jensen, A.; Andersen, R.; Damsgaard, C.T.; Michaelsen, K.F.; Tetens, I. Plate waste and intake of school lunch based on the new Nordic diet and on packed lunches: a randomised controlled trial in 8-to 11-year-old Danish children. |
| No 12. | Mikkelsen, B.E. Images of foodscapes: Introduction to foodscape studies and their application in the study of healthy eating out-of-home environments. |
| No 13. | Ryan-Fogarty, Y.; Becker, G.; Moles, R.; O’Regan, B. Backcasting to identify food waste prevention and mitigation opportunities for infant feeding in maternity services. |
| No 14. | Nelson, M.; Breda, J. School food research: building the evidence base for policy. |
| No 15. | Filippini, R.; De Noni, I.; Corsi, S.; Spigarolo, R.; Bocchi, S. Sustainable school food procurement: What factors do affect the introduction and the increase of organic food? |
| No 16. | Doherty, S.; Cawood, J.; Dooris, M. Applying the whole-system settings approach to food within universities. |
| No 17. | Thorsen, A.V.; Lassen, A.D.; Tetens, I.; Hels, O.; Mikkelsen, B.E. Long-term sustainability of a worksite canteen intervention of serving more fruit and vegetables. |
| No 18. | Pittman, D.W.; Parker, J.S.; Getz, B.R.; Jackson, C.M.; Le, T.A.; Riggs, S.B.; Shay, J.M. Cost-free and sustainable incentive increases healthy eating decisions during elementary school lunch. |
| No 19. | Moore, L.; de Silva-Sanigorski, A.; Moore, S.N. A socio-ecological perspective on behavioural interventions to influence food choice in schools: alternative, complementary or synergistic? |
| No 20. | Gray, S.; Jones, M.; Means, R.; Orme, J.; Pitt, H.; Salmon, D. Inter-sectoral Transfer of the Food for Life Settings Framework in England. |
Main content of the included articles.
| Ref No | Aim | Public Meal Arena | Aspects of Health | Aspects of Sustainability | Motivation for Combining Health and Sustainability |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No 1. [ | To examine the associations between promotion of sustainable food issues in primary schools and student self-reported fruit and vegetable consumption and associated student behaviors. | School | Food sustainability may have impact on re-energizing multi-component health programs in schools as a conceptually coherent set of practices. | Ecological, ethical and welfare aspects of food as a foreground and as part of the global debate about food security and the environmental impacts of an industrialized food system. | |
| No 2. [ | To highlight research on the history and health implications of school meal programs in a cross-national comparative framework. Specifically to discuss the current role of school meals as a tool for improving food behaviors and population health in a sustainable way. | School | School meal programs contribute to teaching children their culinary heritage and norms around consumption, sustainability, and health in their resident country, and they can create a social and physical learning environment around food that may help to tackle current challenges in health and sustainability. | No clear definitions or disagreements on what healthy and sustainable mean will be challenging during any attempt to evaluate impact of school meals. | |
| No 3. [ | To examine the association between primary school engagement in the Food for Life programme (FFLP) and the consumption of fruit and vegetables by children aged 8–10 years. | School | Intake of fruits and vegetables as part of a healthy diet | No definition or explanation. | |
| No 4. [ | To analyze food meal portions in primary schools and their compliance with standard portions. | School | Children’s overweight/obesity | Concerns of | Food portion size is important for both overweight and food waste. |
| No 5. [ | To investigate environmental impact of snack recipes with the aim of improving sustainability in public procurement. | Elderly Care | Sufficient energy and protein intake. | Both have significant socioeconomic implications. | |
| No 6. [ | To estimate expected changes in the nutritional quality and greenhouse gas emissions (GHGEs) of primary school meals due to adoption of a new mandatory food-based standard for school meals. | School | Measurements to identify nutritional quality or healthiness of a primary school meal. Two nutrient-based definitions were used to define a ‘healthy school meal’. First: based on saturated fat, non-milk extrinsic sugars and salt. Second: based on 14 nutrients used by the PSFS to quantify nutritional quality of school meals. | Improvement in ‘healthiness’ of a meal does not automatically guarantee a positive | Improving both the nutritional quality and environmental impact of diets is difficult. GHGE reduction is a priority concern globally which requires actions from all sectors. Both production and consumption of food need to be addressed. Tackling both climate change impact and health impacts of food are important policy priorities globally. Looking at the GHGE of diets and their nutritional quality or health impacts is of importance. |
| No 7. [ | To develop an assessment tool for measuring the sustainability of a meal/recipe. | Restaurant | Health was included in sustainability and consisted of figures describing the amount of: energy, fiber, carbohydrate, sugar and salt. | Health is a part of the sustainability. | |
| No 8. [ | To evaluate impact and challenges of implementation of a Food for Life approach within three pilot sites. | Hospital | No definition or explanation. | No definition or explanation. | Hospitals need support and clearer performance measures in the area of food. Models of centralized cook-chill meals for patients may offer opportunities to influence specifications to improve nutrition, quality and sustainability. |
| No 9. [ | To examine the influence of organic food sourcing policies on the development of healthier school food environments. | School | The Food and Nutrition Policy is a set of principles that aims to fulfil the nutritional needs of pupils and ensure availability and accessibility of healthy foods in schools. | No definition or explanation. | Experience suggests that a rethink of school meals seems to be based on the perspectives: organic sourcing and healthy eating. |
| No 10. [ | To address the need for more comprehensive studies on sustainable food systems through a case study of hospital food waste. | Hospital | No definition or explanation | Sustainable food procurement is about nutrition, where the food comes from, how it is produced and transported, and where it ends up. It is also about food quality, safety, and choice. Meaning that it is about defining the best value in a broad sense. | |
| No 11. [ | To investigate whether the amount of food intake and total and relative edible plate waste differed between packed lunches from home and school meals. A further objective was to examine how food intake and food waste are associated with the liking of meals. | School | Health equals eating in accordance with the national dietary guidelines. Schools are important settings to improve access to healthy foods for preventing overweight, obesity and chronic diseases in the long term and to reach children across all ethnic and socioeconomic groups. | Awareness of food waste in a dietary sustainability context. | |
| No 12. [ | To explore the notion of foodscapes and discuss its relevance in understanding determinants of food behavior in institutional out-of-home eating environments. A further aim is to contribute to the development of foodscape studies as a tool to understand and develop health behavior while eating in out-of-home environments. | Restaurant | Food environment impacts our behavior and health, the ‘agency’ of the physical environment and assumes that the environment can act in ways that are both supportive and counterproductive for a given food behavior. | Food production and consumption has significant implications on our health as well as on the environment. Foodscapes may capture change agendas related to healthier and more sustainable production and consumption. | |
| No 13. [ | To evaluate the use of back casting as a tool for mitigation of Ready to Use breast-milk substitute food waste. | Hospital | Health is related to nutrition for infants. | Sustainability in terms of energy demand and the negative | Based on climate change and the environmental impact of food consumption, new sources of nutrition are needed. The ambition of reducing waste from infant formula feeding might lead to increased breastfeeding which is suggested to support the health of the infant. |
| No 14. [ | To outline a rationale for school food research, monitoring, and evaluation in relation to policy, and to identify ways forward for future working. | School | Improvements in healthy food and good nutrition, but also well-being and growth, by schools to promote the health of the children. Nutrition strategies in schools are discussed in terms of the ability to help both children and their families to become empowered in consuming and promoting healthy and sustainable diets. | Impact of school meals on the | School food and nutrition may provide a cohesive core for health, education and agricultural improvement. |
| No 15. [ | To examine the public food procurement system in municipalities of Lombardy in Northern Italy. | School | Discussed in terms of healthy eating. | Points at the interrelation between healthy diets, economic profitability, social inclusion, and environmental impact concerning sustainable school food procurement. | |
| No 16. [ | To discuss how the Healthy Universities approach can help to ensure a holistic and integrated approach to addressing issues related to food. | Canteen | Health promotion. | No definition/explanation. | Addresses a range of issues that make up the university ‘foodscape’ and thereby promote health in an integrated way taking into account the relationships between environment and behavior. |
| No 17. [ | To analyze the 5-year sustainability of a worksite canteen intervention of serving more fruit and vegetables. | Canteen | Health promotion. | Health promotion can be made more sustainable by targeting interventions to specific settings (worksites). | |
| No 18. [ | To create an intrinsic reinforcement of pride and self-esteem through sustainable, extrinsic public recognition when students were allowed to ring a call bell in the cafeteria in front of their peers after choosing the identified healthiest lunch items with non-flavored milk. | School | Food choice has an impact on health and may be guided by the food pyramid guide. | A cost-free and sustainable practice to increase healthy eating decisions during elementary school lunch service without substantial changes to the routine or environment. | |
| No 19. [ | To highlight the potential importance of viewing alternative approaches as complementary or synergistic, rather than competing, to improve the dietary intake of schoolchildren. | School | Refers to Whitehead taxonomy of multiple levels of influence on health. eg. (i) individual lifestyle factors; (ii) social and community networks; (iii) living and working conditions; and (iv) socioeconomic, cultural and environmental conditions. Further to the socio-ecological health promotion framework where human development is shaped by systems or contexts. | In addressing childhood obesity in a sustainable way, dietary patterns need to be improved overall. Rather than being seen as competing alternatives, diverse approaches to improving the diets of schoolchildren should be considered in terms of their potential to be complementary and synergistic. | |
| No 20. [ | To examine the transferability of practice and learning between settings and tease out the role of whole system frameworks for stimulating change due to a health and sustainability program. | School, hospital, care-home | Health as determined by environmental, organizational and personal factors which interact in complex ways. | The intersection between food, health and sustainability is of greatest importance. |