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Environmental sustainability and food provision in the early childhood and education setting

Version 3 2024-06-19, 21:53
Version 2 2024-06-03, 01:09
Version 1 2023-11-01, 05:03
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-19, 21:53 authored by Audrey ElfordAudrey Elford, Alison SpenceAlison Spence, A Wakem, M Rozman, Karen CampbellKaren Campbell, Penny LovePenny Love
AbstractObjective:To describe environmentally sustainable (ES) and healthy food provision practices in childcare services in Victoria, Australia.Design:Cross-sectional study.Setting:Childcare services providing food onsite.Participants:Staff completed an online survey that explored ES food provision practices including purchasing seasonal/local food, food waste awareness/management, and food cost/child/d. A purposively sampled subgroup conducted weighed audits to determine compliance with guidelines and total waste, serving waste (prepared, not served) and plate waste.Results:Survey results found 8 % of services (n 129) had previously conducted food waste audits. Service audits (n 12) found 27 % total food waste (range: 9 % - 64 %). Statistically significant differences in plate waste were found between services who had previously conducted food waste audits (7 %) and those who had not (17 %) (P = 0·04). The most common ES practice was ‘providing seasonal food’; the least common was ‘maintaining a compost system’ and ‘less packaged foods’. Most services (95 %) purchased foods from supermarkets with 23 % purchasing from farmers’ markets. This was statistically lower for regional/rural services (8 %), compared to metropolitan services (27 %) (P = 0·04). Twenty-seven per cent of services spent AUD2·50 or less per child per day on food. Only one audited service provided a menu compliant with childcare food provision guidelines.Conclusions:Childcare settings procure and provide large volumes of food; however, food waste awareness appears limited, and environmentally sustainable food procurement practices may be less affordable and difficult to achieve. Understanding the impact of food waste awareness on food waste practices and food costs across time merits further research.

History

Journal

Public Health Nutrition

Volume

26

Pagination

2200-2210

Location

England

ISSN

1368-9800

eISSN

1475-2727

Language

English

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Issue

11

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS