A two-phase, school-based intervention will be conducted at a high school in Baltimore to evaluate whether the addition of spices and herbs to vegetable dishes in the National School Lunch Program (NSLP) can increase vegetable intake among students in an urban and predominantly African-American high school.
The proposed research will be conducted at Cristo Rey Jesuit High School in Baltimore, Maryland. In this two-phase intervention, the research team will work in Phase I with stakeholders throughout the high school community to identify the barriers to vegetable intake in the NSLP in this student population and to determine how spices and herbs might help overcome these barriers. The stakeholders with whom we will collaborate will include students, school administration, and cafeteria staff. Phase II will focus on the direct measurement of vegetable intake among students both before and after spices and herbs are added to the vegetables in the NSLP. The spiced vegetable recipes that received the most favorable student rankings in the taste tests of Phase I will be offered. The vegetable recipes flavored with spices and herbs will meet all NSLP requirements for fat, sugar, total calories, and all other guidelines. Student vegetable intake will be assessed through two outcomes: 1.) plate waste, and 2.) production waste.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
OTHER
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
29
Direct measurement of school lunch vegetable intake among students both before and after spices and herbs are added.
Center for Integrative Medicine University of Maryland
Baltimore, Maryland, United States
Vegetable plate waste
Student vegetable intake will be assessed through plate waste (weighed).
Time frame: The overall time frame for the outcome measure assessment is up to 8 months. This will occur during the 2016-2017 school year.
Cafeteria production waste as measured by calculating the difference between total prepared vegetable weight and discarded vegetable weight.
This outcome involves quantifying both the amount of vegetables that were prepared and served and the amount of vegetables that were thrown away by cafeteria staff after lunch.
Time frame: The overall time frame for the outcome measure assessment is up to 8 months. This will occur during the 2016-2017 school year.
Attitudes towards eating vegetables
Participants will complete a baseline questionnaire in the Spring of 2016 followed by a follow-up questionnaire at the end of the 2016-2017 school year. Changes in attitudes towards eating vegetables will be assessed before and after the addition of spices and herbs to the school lunch vegetables.
Time frame: The outcome measure is being assessed up to 12 months. Spring 2016 through Spring 2017.
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