Food & BeverageHealth & Safety

Should we ban junk food in schools? We asked five experts

Obesity rates are on the rise in Australia and across the world. For years, public health and medical groups have called for schools to ban sales of junk foods as one way to stem the tide.

Selling fatty or sugary food and drinks has been banned in Western Australia’s public schools since 2007. A 2018 study found WA children were eating healthier as a result of the ban. But it also found some regional schools were struggling to comply with it.

Some countries, including Canada and Chile, have banned junk food in schools. Should Australia do the same?

We asked five experts.

Four out of five experts said yes

Here are their detailed responses:


If you have a “yes or no” education question you’d like posed to Five Experts, email your suggestion to: [email protected]


Disclosures: Gary Sacks receives funding from the National Heart Foundation of Australia, the National Health and Medical Research Council, and VicHealth.The Conversation

Madeleine Rojahn, Editorial intern, The Conversation and Sasha Petrova, Section Editor: Education, The Conversation. This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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