Abstract

BackgroundIncreasing school breakfast participation has been advocated as a method to prevent childhood obesity. However, little is known about children’s breakfast patterns outside of school (e.g., home, corner store). Policies that increase school breakfast participation without an understanding of children’s breakfast habits outside of school may result in children consuming multiple breakfasts and may undermine efforts to prevent obesity. The aim of the current study was to describe morning food and drink consumption patterns among low-income, urban children and their associations with relative weight.MethodsA cross-sectional analysis was conducted of data obtained from 651 4th-6th graders (51.7% female, 61.2% African American, 10.7 years) in 2012. Students completed surveys at school that included all foods eaten and their locations that morning. Height and weight were measured by trained research staff.ResultsOn the day surveyed, 12.4% of youth reported not eating breakfast, 49.8% reported eating one breakfast, 25.5% reported eating two breakfasts, and 12.3% reported eating three or more breakfasts. The number of breakfasts consumed and BMI percentile showed a significant curvilinear relationship, with higher mean BMI percentiles observed among children who did not consume any breakfast and those who consumed ≥ 3 breakfasts. Sixth graders were significantly less likely to have consumed breakfast compared to younger children. A greater proportion of obese youth had no breakfast (18.0%) compared to healthy weight (10.1%) and overweight youth (10.7%, p = .01).ConclusionsWhen promoting school breakfast, policies will need to be mindful of both over- and under-consumption to effectively address childhood obesity and food insecurity.Clinical trial registrationNCT01924130 from http://clinicaltrials.gov/.

Highlights

  • Increasing school breakfast participation has been advocated as a method to prevent childhood obesity

  • Lunch Program, the number that participate in the School Breakfast Program (SBP) has grown from 48.8% in 1990 to 91.2% in 2011 [4]

  • Only half (50.4%) of low-income children that participate in the National School Lunch Program participate in the SBP [4]

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Summary

Introduction

Increasing school breakfast participation has been advocated as a method to prevent childhood obesity. To encourage students’ participation in school breakfast, school boards in major cities including Chicago, Houston, Memphis, Philadelphia, and Washington D.C. have adopted programs to offer breakfast in the classroom [5]. This is seen as a way to combat stigma associated with school breakfast participation [6], to address logistical challenges with breakfast served before school, and to fight food insecurity [7] and childhood obesity [5]

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