Abstract
OBJECTIVE: This study determined the extent to which schools adhered to select nutrition and wellness provisions of the 2010 Healthy, Hunger-Free Kids Act and examined differences by US region and school poverty level. DESIGN: Comparison of cross-sectional observational data from the Healthy Communities Study (2013-2015) by region and school poverty level. PARTICIPANTS: A total of 401 US elementary and middle schools. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Adherence with federal nutrition standards for meals and competitive foods; extent of implementation of select aspects of school wellness policies. ANALYSIS: Descriptive statistics and multivariate regression were used. Differences were examined by school poverty level and region, adjusting for other school- and community-level covariates. RESULTS: Most schools reported meeting reimbursable school meal nutrition standards (74%); more schools in the West met nutrition standards (82%) than in the Midwest (64%). Most grains offered at lunch were whole grain-rich (82%), and most competitive foods complied with standards (78%) before they were required. Most schools had a wellness coordinator (80%). Lowest levels of adherence were reported for guidelines for classroom or school event foods. No differences were observed by school poverty level. CONCLUSIONS AND IMPLICATIONS: Findings suggest that Healthy Hunger-Free Kids Act provisions were feasible across a wide variety of schools, and schools successfully implemented reimbursable school meal nutrition standards regardless of school poverty level.