dc.creatorBundy, Donald, ed.
dc.creatorSilva, Nilanthi de, ed.
dc.creatorHorton, Susan, ed.
dc.creatorJamison, Dean T., ed.
dc.creatorPatton, George C., ed.
dc.creatorBundy, Donald
dc.creatorSilva, Nilanthi de
dc.creatorHorton, Susan
dc.creatorPatton, George C.
dc.creatorSchultz, Linda
dc.creatorJamison, Dean T.
dc.creatorGalloway, Ray
dc.creatorBing Wu, Kin
dc.creatorAzzopardi, Peter
dc.creatorKennedy, Elissa
dc.creatorCoffey, Carolyn
dc.creatorMokdad, Ali
dc.creatorAlderman, Harold
dc.creatorBehrman, Jere R.
dc.creatorGlewwe, Paul
dc.creatorFernald, Lia C.
dc.creatorWalker, Susan P.
dc.creatorWatkins, Kristie L.
dc.creatorFink, Günther
dc.creatorGeorgiadis, Andreas
dc.creatorViner, Russell M.
dc.creatorAllen, Nicholas B.
dc.creatorGrigorenko, Elena L
dc.creatorLassi, Zohra
dc.creatorMoin, Anoosh
dc.creatorBhutta, Zulfiqar
dc.creatorDrake, Lesley
dc.creatorFernandes, Meena
dc.creatorAurino, Elisabetta
dc.creatorKiamba, Josephine
dc.creatorGiyose, Boitshepo
dc.creatorBurbano de Lara, Carmen
dc.creatorAlderman, Harold
dc.creatorMai, Lu
dc.creatorMitchell, Arlene
dc.creatorGelli, Aulo
dc.creatorAppleby, Laura J.
dc.creatorBradley, Mark
dc.creatorCroke, Kevin
dc.creatorHollingsworth, T. Deirdre
dc.creatorPullan, Rachel
dc.creatorTurner, Hugo C.
dc.creatorGraham, Hugo C.
dc.creatorMitra, Sophie
dc.creatorMont, Daniel
dc.creatorBlack, Maureen M.
dc.creatorGove, Amber
dc.creatorMerseth, Katherine A.
dc.creatorSarr, Bachir
dc.creatorBanham, Louise
dc.creatorColenso, Peter
dc.creatorDrake, Lesley
dc.creatorPlaut, Daniel
dc.creatorThomas, Milan
dc.creatorHill, Tara
dc.creatorWorthington, Jordan
dc.creatorBurnett, Nicholas
dc.creatorWalque, Damien de
dc.creatorGertler, Paul
dc.creatorHidrobo, Melissa
dc.creatorNandi, Arindam
dc.creatorBehrman, Jere R.
dc.creatorBhalotra, Sonia
dc.creatorDeolalikar, Anil B.
dc.creatorLaxminarayan, Ramanan
dc.creatorVerguet, Stéphane
dc.creatorFilippi, Véronique
dc.date.accessioned2019-05-21T18:00:30Z
dc.date.accessioned2024-05-08T21:03:18Z
dc.date.available2019-05-21T18:00:30Z
dc.date.available2024-05-08T21:03:18Z
dc.date.created2019-05-21T18:00:30Z
dc.date.issued2018
dc.identifierhttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12799/6582
dc.identifier.urihttps://repositorioslatinoamericanos.uchile.cl/handle/2250/9378766
dc.description.abstractAnalysis shows that a quality education, combined with a guaranteed package of health and nutrition interventions at school, such as school feeding, can contribute to child and adolescent development and build human capital. School feeding programs can help get children into school and help them stay there, increasing enrollment and reducing absenteeism. Once children are in the classroom, these programs can contribute to their learning by avoiding hunger and enhancing cognitive abilities. The benefits are especially great for the poorest and most disadvantaged children. As highlighted in the World Bank’s 2018 World Development Report (World Bank 2018), countries need to prioritize learning, not just schooling. Children must be healthy, not hungry, if they are to match learning opportunities with the ability to learn. In the most vulnerable communities, nutrition-sensitive school meals can offer children a regular source of nutrients that are essential for their mental and physical development. And for the growing number of countries with a “double burden” of undernutrition and emerging obesity problems, well-designed school meals can help set children on the path toward more healthy diets. In Latin America, for example, where there is a growing burden of noncommunicable diseases (NCDs), school feeding programs are a key intervention in reducing undernutrition and promoting healthy diet choices. Mexico’s experience reducing sugary beverages in school cafeterias, for example, was found to be beneficial in advancing a healthy lifestyle. A large trial of school-based interventions in China also found that nutritional or physical activity interventions alone are not as effective as a joint program that combines nutritional and educational interventions. In poor communities, economic benefits from school feeding programs are also evident—reducing poverty by boosting income for households and communities as a whole. For families, the value of meals in school is equivalent to about 10 percent of a household’s income. For families with several children, that can mean substantial savings. As a result, school feeding programs are often part of social safety nets in poor countries, and they can be a stable way to reliably target pro-poor investments into communities, as well as a system that can be scaled up rapidly to respond to crises. There are also direct economic benefits for smallholder farmers in the community. Buying local food creates stable markets, boosting local agriculture, impacting rural transformation, and strengthening local food systems. In Brazil, for example, 30 percent of all purchases for school feeding come from smallholder agriculture (Drake and others 2016). These farmers are oftentimes parents with schoolchildren, helping them break intergenerational cycles of hunger and poverty. Notably, benefits to households and communities offer important synergies. The economic growth in poor communities helps provide stability and better-quality education and health systems that promote human capital. At the same time, children and adolescents grow up to enjoy better employment and social opportunities as their communities grow.
dc.languagespa
dc.publisherBanco Mundial
dc.relationChild and Adolescent Health and Development;8
dc.relationhttp://repositorio.minedu.gob.pe/handle/MINEDU/6582
dc.rightshttp://creativecommons.org/licences/by-nc-nd/2.5/pe/
dc.rightsinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
dc.sourceMINISTERIO DE EDUCACIÓN
dc.sourceRepositorio institucional - MINEDU
dc.subjectAlimentación
dc.subjectNutrición
dc.subjectDesarrollo del niño
dc.subjectSalud
dc.subjectEducación sanitaria
dc.subjectAdolescentes
dc.subjectCognición
dc.subjectPolítica educativa
dc.subjectPolítica social
dc.subjectTransferencia monetaria condicionada
dc.subjectCapital humano
dc.subjectAnálisis costes-beneficio
dc.titleRe-Imagining School Feeding : A High-Return Investment in Human Capital and Local Economies
dc.typeReporte técnico


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