School-based nutritional programmes can help cut obesity in kids

IANS  |  New York 

Schools with enhanced policies and programmes are more likely to promote healthier eating habits among students and help reduce the (BMI), a new study says.

The study showed that students in such schools reported healthier behaviours than their peers in schools without such programmes.

"Childhood is a serious threat, and schools are a vital way to reach children and their families to reduce risks and promote health," said Jeannette Ickovics, from the in the US.

"These findings strongly support previous administration policies that provided healthier for all children in public schools," Ickovics added.

Being overweight or obese early in life affects across the lifespan, contributing to a range of such as hypertension, diabetes, and that reduce productivity and shorten life expectancy, researchers noted, in the paper published in of Preventive Medicine.

The nutritional interventions included ensuring that all school-based meals met federal nutritional criteria; providing nutritional newsletters for students and their families.

It also included school-wide campaigns to limit sugary drinks and encourage the use of water; and limiting the use of or beverages as rewards for academic performance or good behaviour.

Students in schools with such policies had an increase in BMI percentile of less than one per cent compared with students in schools without it who demonstrated increases of three to four per cent.

The results are based on a five-year trial, where the team analysed both behavioural and biological indicators of 600 students from 12 schools in New Haven, US. --IANS

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First Published: Mon, December 17 2018. 19:16 IST