PLoS Medicine (Jan 2022)

A nationwide school fruit and vegetable policy and childhood and adolescent overweight: A quasi-natural experimental study.

  • Bente Øvrebø,
  • Tonje H Stea,
  • Ingunn H Bergh,
  • Elling Bere,
  • Pål Surén,
  • Per Magnus,
  • Petur B Juliusson,
  • Andrew K Wills

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.1003881
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 1
p. e1003881

Abstract

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BackgroundSchool free fruit and vegetable (FFV) policies are used to promote healthy dietary habits and tackle obesity; however, our understanding of their effects on weight outcomes is limited. We assess the effect of a nationwide FFV policy on childhood and adolescent weight status and explore heterogeneity by sex and socioeconomic position.Methods and findingsThis study used a quasi-natural experimental design. Between 2007 and 2014, Norwegian combined schools (grades 1-10, age 6 to 16 years) were obligated to provide FFVs while elementary schools (grades 1-7) were not. We used 4 nationwide studies (n = 11,215 children) from the Norwegian Growth Cohort with longitudinal or cross-sectional anthropometric data up to age 8.5 and 13 years to capture variation in FFV exposure. Outcomes were body mass index standard deviation score (BMISDS), overweight and obesity (OW/OB), waist circumference (WC), and weight to height ratio (WtHR) at age 8.5 years, and BMISDS and OW/OB at age 13 years. Analyses included longitudinal models of the pre- and post-exposure trajectories to estimate the policy effect. The participation rate in each cohort was >80%, and in most analyses ConclusionsIn this study we observed little evidence that the Norwegian nationwide FFV policy had any notable beneficial effect or unintended consequence on weight status among Norwegian children and adolescents.