Farm-to-school nutrition programs with special reference to Egypt and Morocco
The United States’ Farm-To-School Program (F2SP) is a competitive grant program that targets participants of the National School Lunch Program and School Breakfast Program with the aim of increasing the quantity and frequency of locally sourced fruits and vegetables offered to children during the school year. This narrative review aims to summarize the outcomes of the F2SP’s interventions on child health and wellness using the research available to date and provide points to consider when implementing the F2SP outside of the United States, particularly in Egypt and Morocco. Analysis of the existing literature showed that both Egypt and Morocco have been beneficiaries of their aid and have seen improvements in the number of children receiving meals at school. With its centralized school meals system, and with support from the World Food Programme (WFP), Egypt has the infrastructure to set up and sustain a long term F2SP that will enrich local communities, grow local economies, and support the health of the next generation. As the WFP continues its work in Morocco, the focus should be maintained on developing a strong school meals system and addressing immediate food insecurity. The viability of such a program being implemented should be reassessed once outcomes from current hunger relief efforts become available. Additional research is needed to continue to study the feasibility, applicability, and impact of this program, especially as it would be applied in areas with no centralized school meals programs across North Africa.
Keywords
How to Cite
Similar Articles
- Nutritional Quality Assessment and Dietary Diversity of Food in Collective Catering: A Study in Al Hoceima Province, Morocco
- Study of the relationship between nutrition, physical activity and overweight/obesity in children in a school context: Study of the relationship between nutrition, physical activity
- The Impact of Obesogenic Neighborhood Environments and Maternal Health Literacy on Children's Obesogenic Feeding Attitudes
- The Role of Barley, Sorghum, Rice, and Maize in North African Cuisine
- Overview on main nutrition-related diseases in three countries from North Africa
- Update of the nutritional situation in Benin Republic
- Regional and socio-demographic predictors of dietary proficiency of adolescent girls in Nigeria
- Relationship between dietary habits and cardiovascular disease risk factors among commercial drivers in northeast Nigeria
- Participatory cooking demonstrations for mothers improve feeding practices of young children in southern Benin
- Prevalence and determinants of overweight and obesity among in-school adolescents in Harare, Zimbabwe
You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.
Most read articles by the same author(s)
- The role of nutrition in strengthening immune system against newly emerging viral diseases: case of SARS-CoV-2
- Association between breakfast intake and short-term memory, performance and mood among Saudi female adolescents
- Comparison of lifestyle patterns and body weight management practices between normal weight and obese female university students (Riyadh – Saudi Arabia)
- Editorial from the new Editor-in-Chief and the new Executive Deputy Editors-in-Chief

NAJFNR is licensed under