Alicia Casteel ( Alicia.Casteel@Arkansas ) Sheila Brown ( Sheila.Brown@Arkansas )

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Meeting Children ’ s Special Food and Nutrition Needs in Child Nutrition Programs 2006 Breakfast Lunch Training National Food Service Management Institute The University of Mississippi. Alicia Casteel ( Alicia.Casteel@Arkansas.gov ) Sheila Brown ( Sheila.Brown@Arkansas.gov ) (501) 324-9502 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Meeting Children’s Special Food and Nutrition Needs in

Child Nutrition Programs2006 Breakfast Lunch Training

National Food Service Management Institute The University of Mississippi

Alicia Casteel (Alicia.Casteel@Arkansas.gov)

Sheila Brown (Sheila.Brown@Arkansas.gov)

(501) 324-9502

Fax: (501) 324-9505

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Meeting Children’s Special Food and Nutrition Needs in Child Nutrition Programs Lesson 1: Getting to Know the Regulations

• Learn that federal regulations require schools to make reasonable accommodations for children with special dietary needs.

• Describe ways school nutrition staff can comply with the regulations.

Learning Objectives

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Laws and Regulations

• Rehabilitation Act of 1973

• Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA)

• Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA)

• U.S. Department of Agriculture's (USDA) nondiscrimination regulation (7 CFR 15b)

• FNS Instruction 783-2, Revision 2, Meal Substitutions for Medical or Other Special Dietary Reasons

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Disability

Anyone who has a physical or mental impairment, which substantially limits one or more of the major life activities, has a record of such impairment, or is regarded as having such an impairment.

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• Disability

• Special education needed

• IEP completed

• Accommodations made

• Disability

• Special education not needed

• 504 plan completed

• Accommodations made

Section 504IDEA

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USDA Regulations and Guidance

• the child's disability;• an explanation of why the disability restricts

the child's diet;• the major life activity affected by the

disability;• the food or foods to be omitted from the

child's diet, and the food or choice of foods that must be substituted.

Child with disability must have a licensed physician’s statement that includes:

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USDA Regulations and Guidance

Child with medical conditions that are NOT disabilities must have a medical statement that includes:• an identification of the medical or other

special dietary condition which restricts the child's diet;

• the food or foods to be omitted from the child's diet; and the food or choice of foods to be substituted.

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Accommodations

• Use food already purchased when possible

• May require special training

• May require professional help of a registered dietitian

• State agencies may be of assistance

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Food Service Assistants

• Keep confidentiality

• Provide substitutions and modifications

• Exercise care

• Document

• Do not overcharge

• Be consistent

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Meeting Children’s Special Food and Nutrition Needs in Child Nutrition Programs Lesson 2: Helping Students with Diabetes

• Define diabetes and explain the difference between type 1 and type 2 diabetes

• Learn dietary treatments for diabetes

• Describe six accommodations that school food service can make for a student with diabetes

Learning Objectives

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Cheese Pizza Baked chicken

Chef Salad Turkey Sandwich on Whole Wheat

Dinner Roll French Fries

Carrot Sticks Apple

Grape Juice Brown Rice

Cookie Whole Milk

Skim Milk Chocolate Milk

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Diabetes

• Diabetes – the body cannot produce or use insulin

• Insulin – a hormone that helps the body to use glucose as energy

– Type 1

– Type 2

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Dietary Considerations

• Carbohydrates (grains and starches)

• Protein

• Fat

• Meals and snacks

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Diabetic Meal Plans

• Food Guides

From ADA website: http://www.diabetes.org/nutrition-and-recipes/nutrition/foodpyramid.jsp &

USDA website: http://mypyramid.gov/

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Diabetic Meal Plans

• Diabetic Exchanges

– Carbohydrate (includes starch, fruit, milk and vegetable), meat/meat alternate, fat

• Carbohydrate Counting

– Number of grams of carbohydrate in each meal (labels, lists)

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Food Service Assistants

• Plan on file & followed carefully

• Correct portion sizes are crucial

• Labels or computerized nutrient information

• Snacks

• Offer a variety of healthy choices for all students

• Use resources

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Meeting Children’s Special Food and Nutrition Needs in Child Nutrition Programs Lesson 3: Managing Food Allergies

• Summarize key components regarding food allergies

• Explain ways food service assistants can prevent exposing students with allergies to the allergen.

Learning Objectives

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Food Allergies

• Definition

• Symptoms

• Anaphylaxis

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Common Food Allergies

• peanuts• tree nuts (such as almonds, pecans, walnuts)• milk• eggs• soy• wheat• fish (such as bass, cod, flounder)• crustacean shellfish (such as crab, lobster,

shrimp)

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Food Intolerance

• Lactose Intolerance

• Gluten Intolerance

Definition: Food intolerance is an adverse reaction to food that does not involve the immune system.

Examples

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Treatment for Allergies

• Antihistamines/Bronchodilators

• Epinephrine

• Prevention and Strict Avoidance

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Regulations

• Allergies with the potential of anaphylaxis

• Celiac disease

• Allergies with no anaphylaxis

• Food intolerances

Accommodations Required

Accommodations with Approval of Food Service Director

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Food Service Assistants

• Read food labels.

• Know what to avoid and how to substitute.

• Designate allergy-free zones in the kitchen.

• Follow safe food handling practices.

Preventing exposure to allergens starts in the kitchen.

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Food Service Assistants

• Understand the allergy plan.

• Identify the students with documented food allergies.

• Develop standardized cleaning procedures for the cafeteria.

• Learn to recognize signs of anaphylaxis, and know how to activate the school’s emergency plan if anaphylaxis should occur in a student with a life threatening food allergy.

Preventing exposure to allergens continues in the cafeteria and throughout the school.

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Meeting Children’s Special Food and Nutrition Needs in Child Nutrition Programs Lesson 4: Understanding Inborn Errors of Metabolism

• Define inborn errors of metabolism, identify the more common errors, and explain dietary treatment for children with inborn errors of metabolism.

• Describe cafeteria accommodations for these children and understand the need for a professional consultant in difficult cases.

Learning Objectives

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Which of these foods would you be able to eat?

Low-fat Vanilla Yogurt

Baked Beans

Multi-grain Crackers

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Low-fat Vanilla Yogurt

INGREDIENTS: cultured pasteurized grade A nonfat milk, high fructose corn syrup, modified corn starch, whey protein concentrate, kosher gelatin, natural flavor, aspartame, potassium sorbate added to maintain freshness, vitamin A acetate, colored with turmeric and annatto extract, vitamin D3.

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Baked Beans

INGREDIENTS: water, prepared white beans, sugar, mustard, salt corn starch, onion powder, caramel color, tapioca maltodextrin, autolyzed yeast extract, natural flavors.

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Multi-grain Crackers

INGREDIENTS: whole grain wheat flour, enriched flour, barley flakes, soybean oil, sugar, high fructose corn syrup, rye, triticale, millet, molasses, salt, whole wheat, leavening, emulsifiers, rolled oats, onion powder, cornstarch.

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Inborn Errors of Metabolism• Rare genetic disorders in which the body

cannot metabolize food normally

• By-products of metabolism, amino acids, sugars, fatty acids build up in the body, causing serious complications

• Dietary treatment: strict diet management to avoid toxic buildup of dietary by-products

• Special foods or formulas may be needed

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Phenylketonuria (PKU)

• Cannot process the amino acid phenylalanine

• Dietary treatment:

– low-protein diet (to prevent increase in phenylalanine)

– special formula to provide protein

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Galactosemia

• Cannot process the sugar galactose

• Dietary treatment: no milk or dairy products

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Hereditary Fructose Intolerance

• Cannot process the sugar fructose

• Dietary treatment:

– no fructose (high-fructose corn syrup, honey, fruit)

– no sucrose (table sugar)

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Maple Syrup Urine Disease

• Cannot process the branched chain amino acids leucine, isoleucine, valine

• Dietary treatment:– low-protein diet – special formula to provide

protein

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Food Service Assistants

• Maintain communication among parents, teacher, school nurse, food service, and consultant if needed

• Understand the dietary restrictions prescribed in the plan kept on file with the school nurse

• Obtain and serve special formula or foods

• Follow prescribed portion sizes

• Report mistakes immediately

• Keep information confidential

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Meeting Children’s Special Food and Nutrition Needs in Child Nutrition ProgramsTexture Modifications

• May be needed when a child has oral motor problems

• Close communication with the teacher or therapist is required

• Some foods do not require special preparation

• Preparation of foods that are difficult to chew may be part of the physician’s instructions

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Modification of Food Texture

Chopped- food is cut into bite-sized pieces

Ground- food is soft or small enough to swallow with little or now chewing

Pureed- food has a smooth texture similar to pudding

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Thickened Beverages

• Requested by the speech or occupational therapist or the physician

• Powdered thickeners and pre-thickened beverages are available

• Use resources

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Meeting Children’s Special Food and Nutrition Needs in Child Nutrition ProgramsOther considerations: How to Handle Mistakes

• Report mistakes to the parents immediately– Child may need emergency care– Parent can adjust the child’s intake for

the remaining day, if needed– Will provide an explanation of an

unusual blood level