The Journal of school health | 2019

School Wellness in Wisconsin: Evaluating Policies for Practices to Prevent Pediatric Obesity.

 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


BACKGROUND\nWe examined written language in Wisconsin school wellness policies (SWPs) for federal mandate compliance, quality related to obesity prevention, and school characteristics associated with variations in quality. This is the first near census of Wisconsin SWPs and examines whether adhering to federal mandates results in strong policies aimed at preventing pediatric obesity.\n\n\nMETHODS\nPolicies were coded using the WellSAT 2.0. Policy quality was computed as comprehensiveness and strength based on 6 subscales and 2 overall scores. Variations in policy quality were examined by district size, free/reduced lunch percentage, and year of last revision.\n\n\nRESULTS\nWe received SWPs from 91% of districts. Six of the 8 federal mandates were addressed by the majority of districts, although less than one fourth addressed all. Most comprehensiveness scores were weak to moderate, and strength scores were weak. All school characteristics were significantly related to overall policy quality; effect sizes were small.\n\n\nCONCLUSIONS\nOur results confirm the necessity of statewide focus on SWP improvement and suggest that while districts may be meeting federal mandates related to pediatric obesity, few policies include health promotion practices beyond those required. Policies remain fragmented and lack focus on obesity prevention practices; we identify modifiable areas for improvement.

Volume 89 6
Pages \n 503-511\n
DOI 10.1111/josh.12759
Language English
Journal The Journal of school health

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