School meals in Scotland: a CPAG briefing
October 1999

An improved diet helps children get the most out of their education and can improve health in both the short and long term. Child Poverty Action Group (CPAG) believes that the development of a strategy to promote healthy eating would be an investment in the health and education of Scottish school children.

History
Diet, child poverty, education and health

A ‘whole school’ approach to healthy eating

Take-up

Extending free school meal entitlement


History

The development of the school meal service from in the post-war years created a platform from which nutritional poverty affecting children could be tackled in a systematic way. Legislation in recent years has significantly altered this by:

  • restricting entitlement to free school meals to families on income support and income-based jobseekers allowance; and
  • abolishing minimum nutritional standards and price controls.

Diet, child poverty, education and health

Currently, children’s diets are generally too high in sugar and fat and too low in fibre, some vitamins and minerals. Children from low-income families have particularly low intakes of folate and vitamins A and C.

Dietary deficiencies can affect short-term health, increasing the risk of dental problems, anaemia and obesity. In the long term, poor diet may increase the risk of coronary heart disease, strokes and diabetes. Some cancers are believed to relate to a low intake of fresh fruit and vegetables.

Under-nutrition, even in its milder forms can have detrimental effects on cognitive development, behaviour, concentration and school performance. There is evidence from the United States that improved nutritional content of school meals resulted in significant increases in student scores on standardised tests.

Benefit levels fall short of the amount needed to maintain an adequate living standard. Research into the impact of this shortfall on families, found that unexpected expenses were met by cutting back on food and that reconciling quality with cost was difficult for parents.

The 1999 Local Authority Caterers Association Survey found that 22 per cent of parents rely on a school meal to provide a balanced diet and that 60 per cent said that the school meal played a vital role in their children’s diet.

A ‘whole school’ approach to healthy eating

The Government have announced that nutritional standards are to be introduced in England and Wales. CPAG supports this and would welcome a similar approach in Scotland. This should be accompanied by measures to encourage healthy eating. Most effective is a whole school approach linking curriculum messages to a creative high quality food service, offering a balanced diet at competitive prices.

Countries such as Britain where the teaching of food skills in the classroom has declined, have seen a greater increase in reliance on convenience foods and a measurable decline in the health of the population. Nutrition and cooking skills, with an emphasis on providing healthy meals on a low income should be reintroduced into the curriculum.

The introduction of School Nutrition Action Groups should be encouraged. These involve children, parents, teachers and caterers in creating school food policies and can be a successful way of promoting nutrition.

Schools need to take steps to ensure that healthier school meals are not undermined by vending machines and school tuck shops. The introduction of fruit tuck shops in some areas has been successful in encouraging healthy eating. Such initiatives deserve further attention.

Hot meals have recently been withdrawn in some areas. Parents have expressed concerns. Cold meals may also be less attractive to children who are paying, increasing the stigma as free school meal children more obvious. Hot food provision can encourage children to sit together reinforce dining skills. Hot meal provision should be reviewed and guidelines set. Clear guidelines should also be set on what are ‘reasonable’ prices so that children are not excluded by cost.

Take-up

Take-up of school meals in Scotland is 79%. Take-up is much higher in primary schools (83%) than in secondary schools (66%). Stigma, truancy and school exclusion may be among the reasons children do not take-up free school meals. Research into reasons for low take-up should be prioritised so that appropriate steps can be taken to improve matters.

There are indications that stigma is a key factor. Some schools, for example, have separate queues for free meals, other children can be made to wait until paying children have received their lunch. In contrast, a number of schools take steps to avoid children being readily identifiable, for example, by introducing swipe cards for all children. Schools should be encouraged and assisted to introduce sensitive service delivery methods. CPAG supports the Edinburgh School Meal Action Group in recommending that good practice in the management, supervision and evaluation of school meals should be disseminated and pilot schools identified so that models of good practice can be implemented and evaluated.

Extending free school meal entitlement

When family credit replaced family income supplement in 1988, entitlement to free school meals was withdrawn and a notional compensatory amount included in family credit. However, at such low levels of income, there is no guarantee that the compensatory amount would be put towards the cost of school meals rather than other basic essentials. For families getting housing benefit and council tax benefit, the value of the compensation is reduced by up to 85%.

Whilst the working families tax credit is more generous than family credit, it does not lift all working families out of poverty. For example, a couple with two children under 11 will not have sufficient income to meet the ‘low cost but acceptable’ budget set by the Family Budget Unit if they earn less than the current average for family credit claimants (£129 gross per week).

The Family Budget Unit’s report provides a useful contribution to the ‘how much is enough?’ debate. However, CPAG would like to see the Government establish a ‘minimum income standard’ - a level of income necessary to respect human dignity and combat social exclusion.

CPAG believes that extending free school meal entitlement to tax credit recipients would be an important step towards ending child poverty. 70,000 Scottish families get family credit.. An estimated 130,000 Scottish families should get working families tax credit,. Together with moves to improve nutritional standards and service delivery extending free school meal provision, could form part of a strategy to improve the diets of school children. Extending entitlement should help reduce stigma and increase take-up.

CPAG urges the Scottish Executive to consider extending free school meal entitlement to all children of tax credit recipients. Alternatively, they could be extended only to children under 11. The cost could be limited by adopting the formula for passporting tax credit recipients to health benefits (ie. families with gross incomes of under £14,300 a year.)

Extrapolating from figures for the UK as a whole, CPAG estimates that the cost of extending free school meals to all children of tax credit recipients in Scotland would be £102.5 million, £52.5 million for children under 11. If the health benefits formula were adopted, the cost would be reduced to £71.75 million for children of all ages and £36.75 million for children under 11.

For a more detailed briefing, contact Maureen Closs, Fife CPAG Tel: 01592 200 597

 

For more information, please contact Fiona Frobisher,
Parliamentary Officer on 020 7837 7979 x 237 or email ffrobisher@cpag.demon.co.uk


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