Abstract
This present study analyzed the association between the presence and quality of regulatory measures and the promotion of healthy eating in canteens of 2241 private elementary and secondary schools located in 27 Brazilian state capitals. Three strategic axes were evaluated: food and nutrition education (implementation of actions promoting healthy eating), food commercialization (healthiness index, number of unprocessed, minimally processed or processed foods and culinary preparations based on these foods-UMPCP; ultra-processed foods and culinary preparations based on these foods-UpCP; comparison of UMPCP versus UpCP variety; and prohibition of food sales), and marketing communication strategies (advertising strategies for UMPCP and UpCP). The presence and quality of municipal and state regulations in force up to the month prior to data collection were assessed using a score, with a score ≥8 indicating higher quality. Analyses were conducted using binary logistic regression and adjusted generalized linear models in Stata 17.0. More than half of the canteens (51.1%) were located in areas without regulations, and only 17.8% had high-quality regulations. Canteens in areas with regulations, especially those with a score ≥8, had 1.73 times higher odds of implementing food and nutrition education actions, 2.49 times higher odds of prohibiting the sale of certain foods, and 36% lower odds of selling a higher variety of UpCP compared to UMPCP. The healthiness index was higher, the number of UpCP sold was lower, and the number of UMPCP sold was higher, while the adoption of advertising strategies was less frequent in canteens with higher-quality regulations. These findings indicate that the presence and particularly the quality of regulatory measures is associated with healthier school food environments, highlighting the positive impact of well-structured public policies.