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Innovations embodied in
Japan’s school lunch
program
Nobuko Murayama, PhD.
University of Niigata Prefecture
The Japanese Society of Nutrition and Dietetics
Contact: Dr. Nobuko Murayama
E-mail: murayama@unii.ac.jp
N4G Nov. 30th 2021, 8 PM Tokyo
IFPRI, How Japan’s know-how can help address food and nutrition
challenges in the developing world
2
Strong points of Japanese school lunch program
1. There is long history to innovate school lunch program.
2. School lunch program is based on laws and standards
by government and they include school lunches and
nutrition education.
3. School lunch program is implemented for nearly all
school students (high coverage) and it is financially
sustainable system.
4. There is monitoring system for school lunches and
children's growth.
5. There are evidences that school lunches reduce
nutrition disparity and prevent obesity among children
History of school nutrition program 3
Year Event
1889 Free lunch is first offered to poor
schoolchildren at a primary school in Yamagata
Prefecture
1932 A government-funded school lunch program for
poor students is implemented nationwide
1946 A new school lunch policy is established to
cover all schoolchildren
1947 The school lunch program begins providing
lunch for about 3 million schoolchildren across
the country
1950 The complete-meal school lunch program is
started, using wheat flour donated by the US
1954 The School Lunch Act is enacted
1976 Cooked rice is formally introduced
2005 The Shokuiku Basic Act is enacted
2009 Revised School Lunch Act is implemented
(Ishida H., Jpn. J. Nutr. Diet., 76, S2-11 (2018))
(Photos: https://www.zenkyuren.jp/lunch/, Accessed Aug. 2019 )
4
https://trc-adeac.trc.co.jp/Html/Usr/1310305200/spread/sub/03_kyoiku/subpage3_2.html
Signature activity
A nationwide movement
to demand the
continuation of school
lunches with government
subsidies is developed
nationwide.
School lunches were at risk of being cancelled in
1951 by the suspension of U.S. funding.
5
Strong points of Japanese school lunch program
1. There is long history to innovate school lunch program.
2. School lunch program is based on laws and standards
by government and they include school lunches and
nutrition education.
3. School lunch program is implemented for nearly all
school students (high coverage) and it is financially
sustainable system.
4. There is monitoring system for school lunches and
children's growth.
5. There are evidences that school lunches reduce
nutrition disparity and prevent obesity among children
Structure of school lunches and food & nutrition
education
6
Food & Nutrition education
School lunches
Law
Standards
Human
resources
Contents
Food &
Nutrition
contents
linked with
school
lunches
Food &
Nutrition
teachers
Guidelines for Food &
Nutrition education at
schools
Food Guide
Shokuiku Basic Act
School Lunch Act
Lunches are
both a source
of nutrition and
an educational
resource
Food &
Nutrition
teachers,
dietitians
Standards for the
implementation of school
lunches (nutritional
standards)
Standards for hygiene
control of school lunches
School Lunch Act
Education
system in
the
universities
Food composition table Dietary reference intakes
School Lunch Act
Benefits of providing school lunches
• School lunches contribute to the development of
the minds and bodies of schoolchildren
• School lunches help schoolchildren learn about a
proper diet and make appropriate food choices
→The school lunch program is implemented as part
of shokuiku education
7
Main contents:
• 7 objectives of the school lunch program
• Standards for the implementation of school
lunches
• Standards for hygiene control of school lunches
• Food & Nutrition education
Enacted in 1954, last revised in 2009
Nutritional standards
(revised August 2018)
• The dietary reference intake per meal per person is indicated
• Based on “The Dietary Reference Intakes for Japanese (2015
edition)”
• Formulated based on the results of the schoolchildren’s dietary life
survey and dietary circumstances survey
8
Nutrients % of intake with DRIs Standard values (8-9y)
Energy 33% of estimated energy requirement 650 kcal
Protein 13% to 20% energy 13% to 20% energy
Fat 20% to 30% energy 20% to 30% energy
Sodium chloride equivalent <33% of tentative dietary goal <2 g
Calcium 50% of the recommended dietary allowance 350 mg
Iron 40% of the recommended dietary allowance 3 mg
Vitamin A 40% of the recommended dietary allowance 200 µgRAE
Vitamin B1 40% of the recommended dietary allowance 0.4 mg
Vitamin B2 40% of the recommended dietary allowance 0.4 mg
Vitamin C 33% of the recommended dietary allowance 20 mg
Dietary fiber 40% of the recommended dietary allowance >5 g
• School dietitians plan lunch menus according
to the “Nutritional Standards”
• School lunches are served individually, and
children receive the same types and portions
of food on their own tray
9
Current status of school lunches in Japan
(Harlan C. On Japan’s school lunch menu: a healthy meal, made from scratch. Washington Post. January 27, 2013)
Current status of school lunches in Japan 10
Milk
Soup
(Photo: Toyota City School Lunch Program Association, http://www.toyota-school-lunch.jp/kyuusyoku/index.html, Accessed Aug. 2019 )
Main dish: Fish, Meat,
Egg, Soybean supply
Protein
Side dish: Vegetable,
Seaweed supply
Vitamin and Minerals
Staple food:
Rice, Bread,
Noodles
supply
Carbohydrate
Typical school lunch menu in Japan consists of a Staple food,
Main dish, Side dish, Soup and Milk.
Food & Nutrition education (shokuiku) 11
The Three-Color Classification
System for Food Groups
Groups Definitions Food items
Red
group
Dietary sources
of protein
Fish, meat,
soybeans, eggs,
milk
Yellow
group
Dietary sources
of carbohydrates
Grains (wheat,
rice), potatoes,
oils, sugar
Green
group
Dietary sources
of vitamins and
minerals
Vegetables,
fruits, seaweed
School lunch menus are “educational materials”
Names of
dishes Ingredients
Food & Nutrition Teachers 12
Food & Nutrition teachers were added to school faculties
in 2005 to provide both nutritional and educational services.
Purpose
Improve schoolchildren’s nutritional knowledge so they can
make better dietary choices
Responsibilities
Education
• High-risk approach (individual approach)
• Class and population approach
• Family and community
Food service management
• Nutrition management
• Hygiene control
• Food control
316 1016 1967 2736 3476 3743 4355 4703 5064
11989 11302 10280 9589 8723 7754
7741 7440 6969
0
2000
4000
6000
8000
10000
12000
14000
2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014
Other dietitian
Nutrition teacher
Persons
13
Strong points of Japanese school lunch program
1. There is long history to innovate school lunch program.
2. School lunch program is based on laws and standards
by government and they include school lunches and
nutrition education.
3. School lunch program is implemented for nearly all
school students (high coverage) and it is financially
sustainable system.
4. There is monitoring system for school lunches and
children's growth.
5. There are evidences that school lunches reduce
nutrition disparity and prevent obesity among children
Coverage of school lunches in Japan
Primary
schools
Secondary
schools
No. of schools
providing school
lunches
19,350
/19,635
8,791
/10,151
Percentage 98.5% 86.6%
No. of schoolchildren
having school lunches
6,352,201
/6,427,867
2,569,439
/3,253,100
Percentage 98.8% 79.0%
Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (MEXT)
School Lunch Implementation Survey (2018)
Includes complete school lunches (staple, fish/meat, vegetable, and milk)
Excludes school which supply only milk or incomplete school lunches
School lunch fee paid by guardian (public schools)
No. of
meals/year
Cost/month Cost/meal**
Primary schools 191 ¥4,343 ¥250
Secondary schools 186 ¥4,941 ¥292
*Cost includes food materials only; does not include overhead, human
resources, and fuel for cooking, etc.
**Cost/meal = (cost/month × 11) ÷ number of meal/year
Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (MEXT)
School lunch implementation survey (2018)
Facility equipment and personnel expenses shall be
borne by the establisher of compulsory education
schools, and other expenses, such as food staffs,
shall be borne by the guardian. (School Lunch Act.)
Financial system
16
Strong points of Japanese school lunch program
1. There is long history to innovate school lunch program.
2. School lunch program is based on laws and standards
by government and they include school lunches and
nutrition education.
3. School lunch program is implemented for nearly all
school students (high coverage) and it is financially
sustainable system.
4. There is monitoring system for school lunches and
children's growth.
5. There are evidences that school lunches reduce
nutrition disparity and prevent obesity among children
Monitoring and evaluation system
Assess
Plan
Do
Check
Action
National School Health Statistics
National School Lunch Implementation Survey
Nutrition standards for
school lunch
National level
School level
Assess
Plan
Do
Check
Action
Process evaluation:
National School Lunch Implementation Survey
Nutrition Report on School Lunches
Outcome evaluation:
National School Health Statistics
Monitoring and evaluation at the school level
Healthy development
of children
Outcome evaluation
QOL, health/nutritional
status
Impact evaluation
dietary habits,
knowledge, skills, attitude,
food environment
Operation of
school lunch programs
Evaluation of
nutrition/diet
nutrition/dietary controls
Evaluation of menu
menu controls
Evaluation of finances
receiving, storage, and
inventory control of
foodstuffs;
financial management
Evaluation of production
production control
Evaluation of personnel
personnel management
(based on the framework proposed by
Akamatsu et al.)
Kojima Y. et al., Jpn. J. Nutr. Diet., 76, S74-85 (2018)
19
Monitoring and evaluation at the national level
Healthy development
of children
Outcome evaluation
health/nutritional status
National School Health Statistics
Body height and weight
School Lunch Implementation Survey
Nutrition Report on School Lunches
School Prefecture
Operation of
school lunch programs
Implementation status
(Coverage)
Frequency of school
lunches with rice as the
staple food
School lunch fee
School Prefecture
School lunch type, fee,
nutrients provided
Nutrition report
Nutrition report of school lunches
20
(MEXT 2017)
Nutrient intakes (average)
Primary schools Secondary schools
Energy kcal 626.0 781.4
Protein
(animal protein)
g 25.2 30.4
g 13.6 16.0
Fats
(animal fats)
g 20.0 23.6
% 28.7 27.1
g 12.3 13.7
Sodium chloride equivalent g 2.5 3.1
Calcium mg 341.2 380.2
Magnesium mg 94.6 118.3
Zinc mg 2.5 3.3
Iron mg 3.0 3.6
Vitamin A μgRE 253.4 326.4
Vitamin B1 mg 0.7 0.8
Vitamin B2 mg 0.5 0.6
Vitamin C mg 29.7 36.0
Dietary fiber g 4.6 5.9
Use of local foods among ingredients of
school lunches
0.0%
5.0%
10.0%
15.0%
20.0%
25.0%
30.0%
2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019
% of local foods among school lunch ingredients
21
Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (MEXT): Nutrition report of school lunches
Japanese government promote to use local products in the
school lunch. In 2019, 26% of foods used in the school lunch
produced in their prefecture.
26%
Healthy development of children
School health statistics (MEXT)
The height and weight of all elementary school and junior high
school students has been measured annually since 1900.
Change in the height and weight of 14-year-old students by sex
1954 School
Lunch Act
1954 School
Lunch Act
(Kojima Y. et al., Jpn. J. Nutr. Diet., 76, S74-85 (2018))
The height and weight of children improved after the School Lunch
Act was implemented following World War II
Height
Body Weight
Prevalence of overweight students
23
School Health
Statistics, 2018
Boys
Girls
1977 1998 2005/2006 2018
1977 1998 2005/2006 2018
17 y.o.
11 y.o.
14 y.o.
5 y.o.
11 y.o.
17 y.o.
14 y.o.
5 y.o.
(%)
(%)
14.0
12.0
10.0
8.0
6.0
4.0
2.0
0.0
14.0
12.0
10.0
8.0
6.0
4.0
2.0
0.0
(BW-Standard W/H for Japanese children)/Standard W/H*100 >120%
10%
10%
Prevalence of underweight students
24
School Health Statistics, 2018
Boys
Girls
1977 1998 2005/2006 2018
1977 1998 2005/2006 2018
17 y.o.
11 y.o.
14 y.o.
5 y.o.
17 y.o.
14 y.o.
11 y.o.
5 y.o.
6.0
4.0
2.0
0.0
6.0
4.0
2.0
0.0
(%)
(%)
(BW-Standard W/H for Japanese children)/Standard W/H*100 < -20%
5%
5%
25
Strong points of Japanese school lunch program
1. There is long history to innovate school lunch program.
2. School lunch program is based on laws and standards
by government and they include school lunches and
nutrition education.
3. School lunch program is implemented for nearly all
school students (high coverage) and it is financially
sustainable system.
4. There is monitoring system for school lunches and
children's growth.
5. There are evidences that school lunches reduce
nutrition disparity and prevent obesity among children
*
* *
Dietary fiber Vitamin A Calcium
(g) (µg) (mg)
Asakura et al., Public Health Nutrition, 2017
12.8
15.6
0
5
10
15
20
Non-school day School day
501
758
0
200
400
600
800
Non-school day School day
398
563
0
100
200
300
400
500
600
Non-school day School day
Monitoring and evaluation
Difference in nutrient intake between school days (with school
lunches) and non-school days (without school lunches)
Nutrient intake of 144 boys in the 5th grade (10–11 years)
Diet quality and dietary disparity
School lunches contribute to overall diet quality,
especially vitamin and mineral intake.
Amount of food intake by household income
56
80
69
85
62
85
40
50
60
70
80
90
Non-school
day
School day
Green vegetables
Low Middle High
(g)
P = 0.008
P = 0.39
43
50
48
50
55
56
40
45
50
55
60
Non-school
day
School day
Fish & Shellfish
Low Middle High
(g)
P < 0.001
P = 0.20
Murayama et al. Public Health Nutr. 2017; 20(16):2946-2958.
School lunches reduce disparity of diet by
household income levels.
income income
Amount of nutrient intake by household income
64.4
74.7
68
75.2
70.5
76.6
40
45
50
55
60
65
70
75
80
Non-school
day
School day
Protein
Low Middle High
(g)
P < 0.001
P = 0.56
6.2
7
6.6
7
6.6
7.4
5
6
7
8
Non-school
day
School day
Iron
Low Middle High
(mg)
P = 0.029
P = 0.24
Murayama et al. Public Health Nutr. 2017; 20(16):2946-2958.
income income
Expansion of the school lunch program
in secondary school by prefecture
29
Miyawaki A et al. 2018. Journal of Public Health | Vol. 41, No. 2, pp. 362–370
2006 2010
2015
D: Changes of school lunch coverage
from 2006 to 2015(red color indicate
high increase of school lunch coverage)
Impact of the school lunch coverage rate on
overweight/obese junior high school students
30
Miyawaki A et al. 2018. Journal of Public Health | Vol. 41, No. 2, pp. 362–370
**P < 0.01, ***P < 0.001
Overweight (%) Obesity (%)
Girls Coefficient −0.014 −0.007
95%CI −0.032, 0.005 −0.018, 0.003
R-squared 0.592 0.531
Observations 1,251 1,251
Boys Coefficient −0.037*** −0.023**
95%CI −0.056, −0.018 −0.037, −0.010
R-squared 0.701 0.600
Observations 1,251 1,251
Ordinary least square estimations were applied with adjustment for the lagged
dependent variable and dummy variables for prefecture, age, and year.
For overweight/obese percentage, the coefficient indicates the impact of a 1
percentage point change in the school lunch coverage rate on each outcome.
Summary
➢Japanese school lunch programs include
nutrition education. The program has been
established based on school lunch law and
other guidelines.
➢Monitoring and evaluation system has been
established.
➢Japanese school lunch programs contribute
preventing double burden of malnutrition,
reducing socioeconomic disparities of diet,
and promoting sustainable food system
through using local foods.
31

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Innovations embodied in Japan’s school lunch program

  • 1. Innovations embodied in Japan’s school lunch program Nobuko Murayama, PhD. University of Niigata Prefecture The Japanese Society of Nutrition and Dietetics Contact: Dr. Nobuko Murayama E-mail: murayama@unii.ac.jp N4G Nov. 30th 2021, 8 PM Tokyo IFPRI, How Japan’s know-how can help address food and nutrition challenges in the developing world
  • 2. 2 Strong points of Japanese school lunch program 1. There is long history to innovate school lunch program. 2. School lunch program is based on laws and standards by government and they include school lunches and nutrition education. 3. School lunch program is implemented for nearly all school students (high coverage) and it is financially sustainable system. 4. There is monitoring system for school lunches and children's growth. 5. There are evidences that school lunches reduce nutrition disparity and prevent obesity among children
  • 3. History of school nutrition program 3 Year Event 1889 Free lunch is first offered to poor schoolchildren at a primary school in Yamagata Prefecture 1932 A government-funded school lunch program for poor students is implemented nationwide 1946 A new school lunch policy is established to cover all schoolchildren 1947 The school lunch program begins providing lunch for about 3 million schoolchildren across the country 1950 The complete-meal school lunch program is started, using wheat flour donated by the US 1954 The School Lunch Act is enacted 1976 Cooked rice is formally introduced 2005 The Shokuiku Basic Act is enacted 2009 Revised School Lunch Act is implemented (Ishida H., Jpn. J. Nutr. Diet., 76, S2-11 (2018)) (Photos: https://www.zenkyuren.jp/lunch/, Accessed Aug. 2019 )
  • 4. 4 https://trc-adeac.trc.co.jp/Html/Usr/1310305200/spread/sub/03_kyoiku/subpage3_2.html Signature activity A nationwide movement to demand the continuation of school lunches with government subsidies is developed nationwide. School lunches were at risk of being cancelled in 1951 by the suspension of U.S. funding.
  • 5. 5 Strong points of Japanese school lunch program 1. There is long history to innovate school lunch program. 2. School lunch program is based on laws and standards by government and they include school lunches and nutrition education. 3. School lunch program is implemented for nearly all school students (high coverage) and it is financially sustainable system. 4. There is monitoring system for school lunches and children's growth. 5. There are evidences that school lunches reduce nutrition disparity and prevent obesity among children
  • 6. Structure of school lunches and food & nutrition education 6 Food & Nutrition education School lunches Law Standards Human resources Contents Food & Nutrition contents linked with school lunches Food & Nutrition teachers Guidelines for Food & Nutrition education at schools Food Guide Shokuiku Basic Act School Lunch Act Lunches are both a source of nutrition and an educational resource Food & Nutrition teachers, dietitians Standards for the implementation of school lunches (nutritional standards) Standards for hygiene control of school lunches School Lunch Act Education system in the universities Food composition table Dietary reference intakes
  • 7. School Lunch Act Benefits of providing school lunches • School lunches contribute to the development of the minds and bodies of schoolchildren • School lunches help schoolchildren learn about a proper diet and make appropriate food choices →The school lunch program is implemented as part of shokuiku education 7 Main contents: • 7 objectives of the school lunch program • Standards for the implementation of school lunches • Standards for hygiene control of school lunches • Food & Nutrition education Enacted in 1954, last revised in 2009
  • 8. Nutritional standards (revised August 2018) • The dietary reference intake per meal per person is indicated • Based on “The Dietary Reference Intakes for Japanese (2015 edition)” • Formulated based on the results of the schoolchildren’s dietary life survey and dietary circumstances survey 8 Nutrients % of intake with DRIs Standard values (8-9y) Energy 33% of estimated energy requirement 650 kcal Protein 13% to 20% energy 13% to 20% energy Fat 20% to 30% energy 20% to 30% energy Sodium chloride equivalent <33% of tentative dietary goal <2 g Calcium 50% of the recommended dietary allowance 350 mg Iron 40% of the recommended dietary allowance 3 mg Vitamin A 40% of the recommended dietary allowance 200 µgRAE Vitamin B1 40% of the recommended dietary allowance 0.4 mg Vitamin B2 40% of the recommended dietary allowance 0.4 mg Vitamin C 33% of the recommended dietary allowance 20 mg Dietary fiber 40% of the recommended dietary allowance >5 g
  • 9. • School dietitians plan lunch menus according to the “Nutritional Standards” • School lunches are served individually, and children receive the same types and portions of food on their own tray 9 Current status of school lunches in Japan (Harlan C. On Japan’s school lunch menu: a healthy meal, made from scratch. Washington Post. January 27, 2013)
  • 10. Current status of school lunches in Japan 10 Milk Soup (Photo: Toyota City School Lunch Program Association, http://www.toyota-school-lunch.jp/kyuusyoku/index.html, Accessed Aug. 2019 ) Main dish: Fish, Meat, Egg, Soybean supply Protein Side dish: Vegetable, Seaweed supply Vitamin and Minerals Staple food: Rice, Bread, Noodles supply Carbohydrate Typical school lunch menu in Japan consists of a Staple food, Main dish, Side dish, Soup and Milk.
  • 11. Food & Nutrition education (shokuiku) 11 The Three-Color Classification System for Food Groups Groups Definitions Food items Red group Dietary sources of protein Fish, meat, soybeans, eggs, milk Yellow group Dietary sources of carbohydrates Grains (wheat, rice), potatoes, oils, sugar Green group Dietary sources of vitamins and minerals Vegetables, fruits, seaweed School lunch menus are “educational materials” Names of dishes Ingredients
  • 12. Food & Nutrition Teachers 12 Food & Nutrition teachers were added to school faculties in 2005 to provide both nutritional and educational services. Purpose Improve schoolchildren’s nutritional knowledge so they can make better dietary choices Responsibilities Education • High-risk approach (individual approach) • Class and population approach • Family and community Food service management • Nutrition management • Hygiene control • Food control 316 1016 1967 2736 3476 3743 4355 4703 5064 11989 11302 10280 9589 8723 7754 7741 7440 6969 0 2000 4000 6000 8000 10000 12000 14000 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 Other dietitian Nutrition teacher Persons
  • 13. 13 Strong points of Japanese school lunch program 1. There is long history to innovate school lunch program. 2. School lunch program is based on laws and standards by government and they include school lunches and nutrition education. 3. School lunch program is implemented for nearly all school students (high coverage) and it is financially sustainable system. 4. There is monitoring system for school lunches and children's growth. 5. There are evidences that school lunches reduce nutrition disparity and prevent obesity among children
  • 14. Coverage of school lunches in Japan Primary schools Secondary schools No. of schools providing school lunches 19,350 /19,635 8,791 /10,151 Percentage 98.5% 86.6% No. of schoolchildren having school lunches 6,352,201 /6,427,867 2,569,439 /3,253,100 Percentage 98.8% 79.0% Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (MEXT) School Lunch Implementation Survey (2018) Includes complete school lunches (staple, fish/meat, vegetable, and milk) Excludes school which supply only milk or incomplete school lunches
  • 15. School lunch fee paid by guardian (public schools) No. of meals/year Cost/month Cost/meal** Primary schools 191 ¥4,343 ¥250 Secondary schools 186 ¥4,941 ¥292 *Cost includes food materials only; does not include overhead, human resources, and fuel for cooking, etc. **Cost/meal = (cost/month × 11) ÷ number of meal/year Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (MEXT) School lunch implementation survey (2018) Facility equipment and personnel expenses shall be borne by the establisher of compulsory education schools, and other expenses, such as food staffs, shall be borne by the guardian. (School Lunch Act.) Financial system
  • 16. 16 Strong points of Japanese school lunch program 1. There is long history to innovate school lunch program. 2. School lunch program is based on laws and standards by government and they include school lunches and nutrition education. 3. School lunch program is implemented for nearly all school students (high coverage) and it is financially sustainable system. 4. There is monitoring system for school lunches and children's growth. 5. There are evidences that school lunches reduce nutrition disparity and prevent obesity among children
  • 17. Monitoring and evaluation system Assess Plan Do Check Action National School Health Statistics National School Lunch Implementation Survey Nutrition standards for school lunch National level School level Assess Plan Do Check Action Process evaluation: National School Lunch Implementation Survey Nutrition Report on School Lunches Outcome evaluation: National School Health Statistics
  • 18. Monitoring and evaluation at the school level Healthy development of children Outcome evaluation QOL, health/nutritional status Impact evaluation dietary habits, knowledge, skills, attitude, food environment Operation of school lunch programs Evaluation of nutrition/diet nutrition/dietary controls Evaluation of menu menu controls Evaluation of finances receiving, storage, and inventory control of foodstuffs; financial management Evaluation of production production control Evaluation of personnel personnel management (based on the framework proposed by Akamatsu et al.) Kojima Y. et al., Jpn. J. Nutr. Diet., 76, S74-85 (2018)
  • 19. 19 Monitoring and evaluation at the national level Healthy development of children Outcome evaluation health/nutritional status National School Health Statistics Body height and weight School Lunch Implementation Survey Nutrition Report on School Lunches School Prefecture Operation of school lunch programs Implementation status (Coverage) Frequency of school lunches with rice as the staple food School lunch fee School Prefecture School lunch type, fee, nutrients provided Nutrition report
  • 20. Nutrition report of school lunches 20 (MEXT 2017) Nutrient intakes (average) Primary schools Secondary schools Energy kcal 626.0 781.4 Protein (animal protein) g 25.2 30.4 g 13.6 16.0 Fats (animal fats) g 20.0 23.6 % 28.7 27.1 g 12.3 13.7 Sodium chloride equivalent g 2.5 3.1 Calcium mg 341.2 380.2 Magnesium mg 94.6 118.3 Zinc mg 2.5 3.3 Iron mg 3.0 3.6 Vitamin A μgRE 253.4 326.4 Vitamin B1 mg 0.7 0.8 Vitamin B2 mg 0.5 0.6 Vitamin C mg 29.7 36.0 Dietary fiber g 4.6 5.9
  • 21. Use of local foods among ingredients of school lunches 0.0% 5.0% 10.0% 15.0% 20.0% 25.0% 30.0% 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 % of local foods among school lunch ingredients 21 Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (MEXT): Nutrition report of school lunches Japanese government promote to use local products in the school lunch. In 2019, 26% of foods used in the school lunch produced in their prefecture. 26%
  • 22. Healthy development of children School health statistics (MEXT) The height and weight of all elementary school and junior high school students has been measured annually since 1900. Change in the height and weight of 14-year-old students by sex 1954 School Lunch Act 1954 School Lunch Act (Kojima Y. et al., Jpn. J. Nutr. Diet., 76, S74-85 (2018)) The height and weight of children improved after the School Lunch Act was implemented following World War II Height Body Weight
  • 23. Prevalence of overweight students 23 School Health Statistics, 2018 Boys Girls 1977 1998 2005/2006 2018 1977 1998 2005/2006 2018 17 y.o. 11 y.o. 14 y.o. 5 y.o. 11 y.o. 17 y.o. 14 y.o. 5 y.o. (%) (%) 14.0 12.0 10.0 8.0 6.0 4.0 2.0 0.0 14.0 12.0 10.0 8.0 6.0 4.0 2.0 0.0 (BW-Standard W/H for Japanese children)/Standard W/H*100 >120% 10% 10%
  • 24. Prevalence of underweight students 24 School Health Statistics, 2018 Boys Girls 1977 1998 2005/2006 2018 1977 1998 2005/2006 2018 17 y.o. 11 y.o. 14 y.o. 5 y.o. 17 y.o. 14 y.o. 11 y.o. 5 y.o. 6.0 4.0 2.0 0.0 6.0 4.0 2.0 0.0 (%) (%) (BW-Standard W/H for Japanese children)/Standard W/H*100 < -20% 5% 5%
  • 25. 25 Strong points of Japanese school lunch program 1. There is long history to innovate school lunch program. 2. School lunch program is based on laws and standards by government and they include school lunches and nutrition education. 3. School lunch program is implemented for nearly all school students (high coverage) and it is financially sustainable system. 4. There is monitoring system for school lunches and children's growth. 5. There are evidences that school lunches reduce nutrition disparity and prevent obesity among children
  • 26. * * * Dietary fiber Vitamin A Calcium (g) (µg) (mg) Asakura et al., Public Health Nutrition, 2017 12.8 15.6 0 5 10 15 20 Non-school day School day 501 758 0 200 400 600 800 Non-school day School day 398 563 0 100 200 300 400 500 600 Non-school day School day Monitoring and evaluation Difference in nutrient intake between school days (with school lunches) and non-school days (without school lunches) Nutrient intake of 144 boys in the 5th grade (10–11 years) Diet quality and dietary disparity School lunches contribute to overall diet quality, especially vitamin and mineral intake.
  • 27. Amount of food intake by household income 56 80 69 85 62 85 40 50 60 70 80 90 Non-school day School day Green vegetables Low Middle High (g) P = 0.008 P = 0.39 43 50 48 50 55 56 40 45 50 55 60 Non-school day School day Fish & Shellfish Low Middle High (g) P < 0.001 P = 0.20 Murayama et al. Public Health Nutr. 2017; 20(16):2946-2958. School lunches reduce disparity of diet by household income levels. income income
  • 28. Amount of nutrient intake by household income 64.4 74.7 68 75.2 70.5 76.6 40 45 50 55 60 65 70 75 80 Non-school day School day Protein Low Middle High (g) P < 0.001 P = 0.56 6.2 7 6.6 7 6.6 7.4 5 6 7 8 Non-school day School day Iron Low Middle High (mg) P = 0.029 P = 0.24 Murayama et al. Public Health Nutr. 2017; 20(16):2946-2958. income income
  • 29. Expansion of the school lunch program in secondary school by prefecture 29 Miyawaki A et al. 2018. Journal of Public Health | Vol. 41, No. 2, pp. 362–370 2006 2010 2015 D: Changes of school lunch coverage from 2006 to 2015(red color indicate high increase of school lunch coverage)
  • 30. Impact of the school lunch coverage rate on overweight/obese junior high school students 30 Miyawaki A et al. 2018. Journal of Public Health | Vol. 41, No. 2, pp. 362–370 **P < 0.01, ***P < 0.001 Overweight (%) Obesity (%) Girls Coefficient −0.014 −0.007 95%CI −0.032, 0.005 −0.018, 0.003 R-squared 0.592 0.531 Observations 1,251 1,251 Boys Coefficient −0.037*** −0.023** 95%CI −0.056, −0.018 −0.037, −0.010 R-squared 0.701 0.600 Observations 1,251 1,251 Ordinary least square estimations were applied with adjustment for the lagged dependent variable and dummy variables for prefecture, age, and year. For overweight/obese percentage, the coefficient indicates the impact of a 1 percentage point change in the school lunch coverage rate on each outcome.
  • 31. Summary ➢Japanese school lunch programs include nutrition education. The program has been established based on school lunch law and other guidelines. ➢Monitoring and evaluation system has been established. ➢Japanese school lunch programs contribute preventing double burden of malnutrition, reducing socioeconomic disparities of diet, and promoting sustainable food system through using local foods. 31