
Professor Miranda Pallan
Professor of Child and Adolescent Public Health
Staff profile Dr Miranda Pallan, Professor of Child and Adolescent Public Health and MBChB Senior Tutor at the Department of Applied Health Sciences


The FUEL study was an evaluation of the national School Food Standards and related national policy in secondary schools in the West Midlands area, funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research.

Professor of Child and Adolescent Public Health
Staff profile Dr Miranda Pallan, Professor of Child and Adolescent Public Health and MBChB Senior Tutor at the Department of Applied Health Sciences

Professor of Chronic Disease Epidemiology & Public Health
Peymane Adab is Professor of Chronic Disease Epidemiology & Public Health at the University of Birmingham
We asked secondary schools across the Midlands to be involved in the study. We asked pupils from years 7, 9 and 10, key school staff and governors to take part.
The study started in March 2019 and finished in October 2022.
The aim of the FUEL study was to compare secondary schools legally required to meet the School Food Standards with those that are not legally required to meet the standards. We explored which food was provided and how healthy eating was supported in these two groups of schools.
We also aimed to assess the dietary intake and dental health of pupils, and compared these across the two groups of schools.
In addition, we captured the variation in how the School Food Standards and supporting school food policy are implemented, and explored whether the level of implementation and support for healthy eating is associated with pupils’ dietary intake and dental health.
This gives an opportunity to examine the influence of a legal requirement to meet school food standards by comparing schools which are, versus those which are not required by law to meet them.
We recruited 44 secondary schools in the West Midlands to take part (22 that are required to adhere and 22 that do not have to adhere to the standards).
We compared the provision, sale and consumption of foods in schools and how schools implemented the School Food Standards and the recommendations set out in the School Food Plan.
This was achieved through a variety of data collection methods.
Schools taking part in the FUEL study were asked to complete a number of tasks:
2. Pupils
Children who took part in the FUEL study were asked to complete a questionnaire requesting information on their general health and well-being and dental health, what they had eaten in the past 24 hours, as well as their ethnicity, age, sex and home postcode.
3. Parents
Parents of children taking part were asked to fill in a questionnaire about their views on the school food provision at their child’s school and requesting information on their sex and age group.
4. School staff and governors
School governors and key staff members, including those in management, teaching and catering roles, were asked to complete a questionnaire exploring their views on school food provision, the eating environment, the food curriculum and implementation of the national School Food Standards and the related School Food Plan in their school.
Watch the full version of our video sharing some key findings from the FUEL Study.
FUEL Infographic full version (accessible): [Docx, 16.3KB]
FUEL Infographic full version: [PDF, 3.7MB]
FUEL Infographic short version (accessible) : [Docx, 20.2KB]
FUEL Infographic short version: [PDF, 748KB]
Full citation: Murphy M, Pallan M, Lancashire E, Duff R, Adamson AJ, Bartington S, Frew E, Griffin T, Hurley KL, Parry J, Passmore S, Ravaghi V, Sitch A, Spence S, Rowland MK, Wheeldon S, Adab P. The Food provision, cUlture and Environment in secondary schooLs (FUEL) study: protocol of a mixed methods evaluation of national School Food Standards implementation in secondary schools and their impact on pupils’ dietary intake and dental health. BMJ open. 2020 Oct 1;10:e042931.
Full citation: Pallan M, Murphy M, Morrison B, Pokhilenko I, Sitch A, Frew E, Rawdin C, Adams R, Adamson A, Bartington S, Dobell A, Duff R, Griffin T, Hurley K, Lancashire E, McLeman L, Passmore S, Ravaghi V, Spence S, Adab P. School food policy in secondary schools in England and its impact on adolescents' diets and dental health: the FUEL multiple-methods study. Public Health Research. 2024 Nov 14;12:1-67.
Full citation: Pallan M, Murphy M, Morrison B, Sitch A, Adamson A, Bartington S, Dobell A, Duff R, Frew E, Griffin T, Hurley K, Lancashire E, McLeman L, Passmore S, Pokhilenko I, Rowland M, Ravaghi V, Spence S, Adab P. National school food standards in England: a cross-sectional study to explore compliance in secondary schools and impact on pupil nutritional intake. International Journal of Behavioral Nutrition and Physical Activity. 2024 Oct 24;21:123.
Full citation: Ashraf A, Murphy M, Duff R, Adab P, Pallan M. Sustainability of Diets Consumed by UK Adolescents and Associations Between Diet Sustainability and Meeting Nutritional Requirements. Nutrients. 2025 Jun 27;17(13):2140.
Telephone: +44(0)121 414 8072
Email: fuelstudy@contacts.bham.ac.uk
X/Twitter: @FUELStudy

This study is funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR).