posted on 2013-11-22, 00:00authored byLindsey Turner, Jamie F. Chriqui, Frank J. Chaloupka
Objectives: We examined whether state laws and district policies pertaining to nutritional restrictions on school fundraisers
were associated with school policies as reported by administrators in a nationally-representative sample of United States
public elementary schools.
Methods: We gathered data on school-level fundraising policies via a mail-back survey during the 2009–10 and 2010–11
school years. Surveys were received from 1,278 public elementary schools (response rate = 60.9%). Data were also gathered
on corresponding school district policies and state laws. After removing cases with missing data, the sample size for analysis
was 1,215 schools.
Results: After controlling for school characteristics, school policies were consistently associated with state laws and district
policies, both those pertaining to fundraising generally, as well as specific restrictions on the sale of candy and soda in
fundraisers (all Odds Ratios .2.0 and Ps,.05). However, even where district policies and state laws required fundraising
restrictions, school policies were not uniformly present; school policies were also in place at only 55.8% of these schools, but
were more common at schools in the West (77.1%) and at majority-Latino schools (71.4%), indicating uneven school-level
implementation of district policy and state law.
Conclusions: District policies and state laws were associated with a higher prevalence of elementary school-level
fundraising policies, but many schools that were subject to district policies and state laws did not have school-level
restrictions in place, suggesting the need for further attention to factors hindering policy implementation in schools.
Funding
This research was conducted as part of the Bridging the Gap Program (PI: Frank J. Chaloupka), funded by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation