Analysis of refrigeration equipment in school nutrition programs in the USDA/FNS Southwest Region

Doctor of Philosophy === Department of Hospitality Management and Dietetics === Elizabeth B. Barrett === Rebecca A. Gould === Equipment to store foods at proper temperatures is critical to serving safe and nutritious meals in schools yet little is known about the amount or the adequacy of refrigerat...

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Main Author: Webb, Virginia Susan
Language:en_US
Published: Kansas State University 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2097/14884
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spelling ndltd-KSU-oai-krex.k-state.edu-2097-148842017-03-03T15:44:52Z Analysis of refrigeration equipment in school nutrition programs in the USDA/FNS Southwest Region Webb, Virginia Susan Refrigeration equipment School nutrition Adequacy of refrigeration Refrigeration capacity Management (0454) Nutrition (0570) Doctor of Philosophy Department of Hospitality Management and Dietetics Elizabeth B. Barrett Rebecca A. Gould Equipment to store foods at proper temperatures is critical to serving safe and nutritious meals in schools yet little is known about the amount or the adequacy of refrigerated storage in school nutrition programs. The purposes of this study were to identify the types and capacity of refrigeration equipment used in schools, determine the perceived adequacy of refrigerated storage capacity to meet new meal pattern requirements, and examine differences in adequacy and capacity. A modified Delphi technique, site observations, pilot study, and electronic survey were used for data collection. School nutrition directors in the USDA/FNS Southwest Region (N=2392) served as the population. Respondents provided an inventory of refrigeration equipment for one of the schools in their district and information about perceived adequacy of refrigerated storage, barriers to purchasing refrigeration equipment, resources used to develop specifications, and practices to compensate for inadequate refrigerated storage in their program. Data analysis included descriptive statistics, independent sample t-tests, regression, and ANOVA. Over a third of directors indicated that refrigerated equipment was inadequate to meet new meal pattern requirements. Directors with more experience rated adequacy higher than directors with less experience. Milk coolers (n=212, 88.3%) and walk-in freezers (n=180, 75.0%) were the types of refrigeration equipment found most often in schools. Walk-in freezers and refrigerators provided over 95% of refrigerated storage space. The mean average cubic feet of refrigerated storage per school was 1423±1152. School enrollment is a significant predictor of refrigerated storage capacity. Refrigerated storage is a concern for school nutrition directors who reported practices to compensate for inadequate storage including maintaining low inventory and decreasing the number of items purchased. School nutrition professionals may use the results of this study to implement practices to compensate for inadequate refrigerated storage. Results cannot be generalized due to the regional nature of the survey and low response rate and possible non-response bias. 2012-10-30T20:42:27Z 2012-10-30T20:42:27Z 2012-10-30 2012 December Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2097/14884 en_US Kansas State University
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic Refrigeration equipment
School nutrition
Adequacy of refrigeration
Refrigeration capacity
Management (0454)
Nutrition (0570)
spellingShingle Refrigeration equipment
School nutrition
Adequacy of refrigeration
Refrigeration capacity
Management (0454)
Nutrition (0570)
Webb, Virginia Susan
Analysis of refrigeration equipment in school nutrition programs in the USDA/FNS Southwest Region
description Doctor of Philosophy === Department of Hospitality Management and Dietetics === Elizabeth B. Barrett === Rebecca A. Gould === Equipment to store foods at proper temperatures is critical to serving safe and nutritious meals in schools yet little is known about the amount or the adequacy of refrigerated storage in school nutrition programs. The purposes of this study were to identify the types and capacity of refrigeration equipment used in schools, determine the perceived adequacy of refrigerated storage capacity to meet new meal pattern requirements, and examine differences in adequacy and capacity. A modified Delphi technique, site observations, pilot study, and electronic survey were used for data collection. School nutrition directors in the USDA/FNS Southwest Region (N=2392) served as the population. Respondents provided an inventory of refrigeration equipment for one of the schools in their district and information about perceived adequacy of refrigerated storage, barriers to purchasing refrigeration equipment, resources used to develop specifications, and practices to compensate for inadequate refrigerated storage in their program. Data analysis included descriptive statistics, independent sample t-tests, regression, and ANOVA. Over a third of directors indicated that refrigerated equipment was inadequate to meet new meal pattern requirements. Directors with more experience rated adequacy higher than directors with less experience. Milk coolers (n=212, 88.3%) and walk-in freezers (n=180, 75.0%) were the types of refrigeration equipment found most often in schools. Walk-in freezers and refrigerators provided over 95% of refrigerated storage space. The mean average cubic feet of refrigerated storage per school was 1423±1152. School enrollment is a significant predictor of refrigerated storage capacity. Refrigerated storage is a concern for school nutrition directors who reported practices to compensate for inadequate storage including maintaining low inventory and decreasing the number of items purchased. School nutrition professionals may use the results of this study to implement practices to compensate for inadequate refrigerated storage. Results cannot be generalized due to the regional nature of the survey and low response rate and possible non-response bias.
author Webb, Virginia Susan
author_facet Webb, Virginia Susan
author_sort Webb, Virginia Susan
title Analysis of refrigeration equipment in school nutrition programs in the USDA/FNS Southwest Region
title_short Analysis of refrigeration equipment in school nutrition programs in the USDA/FNS Southwest Region
title_full Analysis of refrigeration equipment in school nutrition programs in the USDA/FNS Southwest Region
title_fullStr Analysis of refrigeration equipment in school nutrition programs in the USDA/FNS Southwest Region
title_full_unstemmed Analysis of refrigeration equipment in school nutrition programs in the USDA/FNS Southwest Region
title_sort analysis of refrigeration equipment in school nutrition programs in the usda/fns southwest region
publisher Kansas State University
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/2097/14884
work_keys_str_mv AT webbvirginiasusan analysisofrefrigerationequipmentinschoolnutritionprogramsintheusdafnssouthwestregion
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