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Diane Harris, Ph.D., M.P.H., C.H.E.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Division of Nutrition, Physical Activity and Obesity. ASTPHND Conference Call March 1, 2011.
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Diane Harris, Ph.D., M.P.H., C.H.E.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Division of Nutrition, Physical Activity and Obesity ASTPHND Conference Call March 1, 2011
The conclusions in this presentation are those of the author and do not necessarily represent the views of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Outline • LMSB2S • Partners & goals • Website • WH involvement • Current salad bar use • Evaluation • Relationship with fed nutrition guidelines • Role of F&V Coordinators Long Beach, CA October 12, 2010
Let’s Move Salad Bars to Schools Launch November 22, 2010
Salad Bar Timeline • February (‘10) – United Fresh Produce Assn. announces “A Salad Bar in Every School” campaign • March -- • April –NFVA Meets with White House – “Big Idea” • June –NFVA supports “A Salad Bar in Every School” as an Alliance initiative • July –USDA supports initiative and promises to develop guidance on food safety and reimbursement for schools • August –Proposal to Sam Kass at White House; Whole Foods Market launches Great American Salad Bar Project in conjunction with Ann Cooper
National Fruit & Vegetable Alliance www.nfva.org
Collecting donations from produce industry To date have donated 60 salad bars to schools in 12 states United Fresh Produce Association http://www.unitedfresh.org/programs/salad_bar_campaign2010
Salad Bar Timeline • February (‘10) – United Fresh Produce Assn. announces “A Salad Bar in Every School” campaign • March -- • April –NFVA Meets with White House – “Big Idea” • June –NFVA supports “A Salad Bar in Every School” as an Alliance initiative • July –USDA supports initiative and promises to develop guidance on food safety and reimbursement for schools • August –Proposal to Sam Kass at White House; Whole Foods Market launches Great American Salad Bar Project in conjunction with Ann Cooper
Whole Foods Market & The Lunchbox (F3 Fdn.) • Raised $1,4 million • Donating 500+ salad bars http://www.saladbarproject.org/
Salad Bar Timeline II • August – UF/CDC meets with Aramark in Philadelphia; 1st conference call with Chartwells • September –White House submits proposal to form new coalition with NFVA, F3 Fdn., Whole Foods; End of Whole Foods fundraising campaign • October – Agreement to form coalition & tie to Let’s Move (Let’s Move Salad Bars to Schools); UF Policy Conference; USDA releases salad bar memo • November –Meeting with Ann Cooper in Boulder (CDC, UF); USDA/FNS requests UF to organize meeting with salad bar experts; First Lady launches “Let’s Move Salad Bars to Schools” in Miami
White House Proposal • Initialstakeholders: • Partnership for a Healthier America (PHA), NFVA, F3, [Whole Foods Market (WFM)] • Install a minimum of 6,000 salad bars in 3 years • http://www.ahealthieramerica.org/index.php
White House Proposal Pillars • Criteria • Incentive prize for bronze level HUSSC • Other schools in NSLP can apply – prioritized based on % free/reduced & commitment to salad bars • Website • One landing page which pushes visitors to salad bar site – run through PHA • F3 runs “back of house” operations – application, donation process
Salad Bar Award • A portable 72 inch 5-well insulated salad bar with two tray slides • four 4-inch deep full pans with covers • eight 4-inch deep half pans with covers • eight 4-inch deep quarter pans with covers • five buffet chilling pads • 24 serving tongs and 24 serving spoons • Four squeeze bottles • One cutting board • One chef's knife, one paring knife, one peeler • One digital pocket thermometer
White House Proposal Pillars II • Application process for school and for district • 1 page application online • Committee consisting of 1 team member from each partner will approve • F3 will distribute salad bar to school • Branding/Messaging/Partners and Financial Sponsors • All logos appear on website (NFVA not CDC) • WFM and UF recognized as inaugural financial supporters – future supporters also recognized
White House Proposal Pillars III • Financial concerns • F3 full responsibility and oversight of website • Financial burden + staffing • Administrative costs compensated • F3 non-profit entity with financial oversight and responsibility of program • Transparency
Salad Bar Timeline II • August – UF/CDC meets with Aramark in Philadelphia; 1st conference call with Chartwells • September –White House submits proposal to form new coalition with NFVA, F3 Fdn., Whole Foods; End of Whole Foods fundraising campaign • October – Agreement to form coalition & tie to Let’s Move (Let’s Move Salad Bars to Schools); UF Policy Conference; USDA releases salad bar memo • November –Meeting with Ann Cooper in Boulder (CDC, UF); USDA/FNS requests UF to organize meeting with salad bar experts; First Lady launches “Let’s Move Salad Bars to Schools” in Miami
Salad Bar Timeline III • December –Buildout of www.saladbars2schools.org functionality; reauthorization of Child Nutrition • January (‘11) – Launch of application form on www.saladbars2schools.org; conference call with Sodexo; assistance to CPPW San Antonio; new proposed rule for school meals nutrition standards; discussions with School Food FOCUS • February – Whole Foods announces commitment to LMSB2S; first anniversary of Let’s Move with multiple mentions of LMSB2S; revised USDA salad bar memo; ASTPHND funding
Continuing Activities • Communication Plan/Promotion • Stakeholders and potential sponsors • Evaluation • Guidance to programs • Potential from large school food management companies • Fundraising & Partnerships • Responsibility, resources • Food Safety • Additional guidance, training to school staff/students
Additional Potential Partners • School Nutrition Association – working through DASH (also National Food Service Management Institute) • National Environmental Health Association/Food-Safe Schools Coalition – has helped with understanding NSF standards • School Food FOCUS – helping to provide information on barriers, motivations in selected large urban districts, hosted call • Culinary Institute of America – United Fresh working with • National Farm to School Network – requested partnership
St. Paul School DistrictExpanded Choice Bars Food Management July, 2010 http://ns.spps.org/sites/3045cf14-0431-4dc4-af6f-c79a83745084/uploads/FoodManagement.pdf
Aramark’s Cool Caf Fruit/Vegetable Bar Before After Claim up to 50% increase in F&V consumption East Greenwich, RI
Sodexo A to Z Salad Bar • From apples to zucchini – and everything in between
Salad Bar Use • Complete reimbursable meal • Fruit and vegetable component • As part of farm to school program (local produce) vs. conventional • Role of commodity foods/proteins • Ability to serve special diet needs
Behavioral Economicsor “Nudges” BRIAN WANSINK, DAVID R. JUST and JOE McKENDRY (Cornell Univ.) http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2010/10/21/opinion/20101021_Oplunch.html?ref=global-home
Evaluation of Salad Bar Programs • 24-h food recall study in children from low-income households in LAUSD • Increase in frequency of fruits and vegetables consumed during the day (change almost all due to increase at lunch) • Intake of energy, cholesterol, saturated fat, total fat significantly lower in children after introduction of salad bar compared to before Slusser et al, 2007 Pub. Health. Nut. 10(12):1490
Evaluation of Salad Bar Programs II • Riverside Unified School District Farmer’s Market Salad Bar • Used in 29 of elementary schools in district • Focuses on local food • Includes hands-on educational activities (Harvest of the Month, taste tests, etc.) • Students who choose the salad bar eat more servings of F&V than students who choose the hot bar http://www.center-trt.org/
White House Childhood Obesity Task Force Report • Recommendation 3.4: Schools should consider upgrading their cafeteria equipment to support the provision of healthier foods, for example, by swapping out deep fryers for salad bars.
Healthy Hunger-Free Kids Act of 2010 • Performance-based increase in reimbursement rate (six cents per meal) to help schools meet the upcoming revised school meal standards • National nutrition standards for all foods sold on the school campus throughout the school day • Model product specifications for commodity foods used in school meals • Provides mandatory funding for farm-to-school programs
New USDA Standards for School Breakfast & Lunch • Proposed Rule issued 1/13/11 • Follows IOM Recommendations • For breakfast, doubles fruit to 1 cup/day • For lunch, increased amount & variety of F&V: • ¾-1 cup of vegetables PLUS ½-1 cup of fruit/day • Weekly requirement for dark green and orange vegetables and legumes • Limits starchy vegetables to 1 cup/week
HealthierUS Schools Challenge • A different vegetable every day of the week • All servings must be at least ¼ cup. • A different fruit every day of the week (fresh, frozen, canned, dried, or 100% juice) • All servings must be at least ¼ cup. • 100% fruit juice can be counted as a fruit only once per week
Questions?dmharris@cdc.gov “When food is fresh and user-friendly, when the salad bar smiles with colors and varieties, kids don’t have to be coerced into eating” • Rodney Taylor Riverside Unified School District
Salad Bar Task Force • Carol Voss (IA) • Mary Ann Ellsworth (NJ) • Donna Speed (MS) • Lisa Gemlo (MN) • Betty Sun (CA) • Diane Golzynski (MI) • Star Morrison (WY)