Increasing fruit and vegetable intake is important to health but children's vegetable intake remains low. In younger age groups parents act as gatekeepers by providing access, availability, persuasion and modelling. This study aimed to enhance parent vegetable serving behaviour and child vegetable intake through an 8-week social cognitive theory-based family cooking program.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
65
The primary focus of the home activity program was based on collaborative parent-child cooking activities which the families undertook themselves at home. There were two key tasks: the first was to add one extra vegetable to the evening meal each day, the second was to select, prepare and cook one recipe from the cook book each week.
The main purpose of these workshops was to provide hands-on successful food preparation and cooking experiences for the families and several opportunities to taste new vegetable-based recipes as well as promoting knowledge of cost and healthy eating. Children and their parents were then encouraged to take whatever was learned and apply it at home.
University of Victoria
Victoria, British Columbia, Canada
Parent Food Serving Frequency
The scale included nine items assessing fruit and vegetable servings including potatoes and 100% fruit juice. Responses were on a 9 point likert scale ranging from 0 which represented never to 9 which represented serving vegetables more than 5 times/per day. For the entire scale, a conversion factor was used to transform responses into average daily servings for each item. To determine parental fruit and vegetable serving behavior, serving habits at breakfast, lunch and dinner for both fruits and vegetables were summed together to provide a score for overall number of servings served. This was also split into the specific number of fruits or vegetables served.
Time frame: 7 days
Child Food Frequency Questionnaire
A Food Frequency Questionnaire for children was used to measure typical weekly intake of fruit and vegetables including two items that addressed fried and white potato intake and one item that addressed 100% juice consumption. The scale was adapted from the US national cancer institute quick scan of fruit and vegetable and validated by Baranowski and colleagues \[41\]. The questionnaire consisted of nine items formatted as a 9 point likert scale whereby 0 represented never consumed and 9 represented consuming vegetables more than five times a day. A conversion factor was used to transform responses into average daily servings for each item, thus higher scores reflected the food choice being eaten more often on a daily basis. Similarly, assessing fruit and vegetable intake was determined by tallying the number of servings consumed across breakfast, lunch and dinner for both fruit and vegetables collectively and independently.
Time frame: 7 days
Cooking confidence (Parent and Child)
Confidence in parents' general cooking/culinary abilities was also measured using part of a scale developed by Barton, Wrieden and Anderson \[43\] combined with two original items that were added to specifically address kitchen skills. Items addressing cooking confidence included questions such as, "how confident do you feel about measuring ingredients." The scale used a 7-point likert scale from "very unconfident" to "very confident". The six items were summed together to produce an overall score ranging from 6 to 42 with higher scores indicating greater sense of cooking self-efficacy. Scale reliability analysis showed that this measure also had good internal consistency (Cronbach's α = 0.95).
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Time frame: 7 days
Outcome Expectations (Parent and Child)
13 items were used to assess outcome expectancies across three areas of known barriers; 1) expectations about taste, 2) expectations about the cost of healthy eating and 3) expectations about the level of effort required to prepare healthy meals. Each item represented a 7-point likert scale ranging from "strongly disagree" to "strongly agree." Items addressing barriers to healthy eating included statements such as, "it is quite expensive to follow a healthy diet." The overall scale was scored by summing all items and items that were negatively worded were reversed scored. Higher scores represented a lower perception of barriers to healthy eating. Scale reliability analysis revealed the overall scale to have good internal consistency (Cronbach's α = 0.79) while the subscales of taste, cost and effort had reliabilities of 0.72, 0.69, 0.68 respectively.
Time frame: 7 days
Exposure, Food Neophobia and Tast Preference (Parent and Child)
A previously validated and internally consistent (Cronbach's α = 0.88) version of a food neophobia scale for children \[7,14,45\] was used to measure parent fruit and vegetable neophobia with one modification. The item "when my parent asks me to eat…" on the children's scale was changed to "when my partner asks me to eat…" on the parent's scale. The food neophobia scale included eight items with all responses falling within a 7-point likert scale read from "strongly disagree" to "strongly agree". A total score was calculated by summing all eight items for a range of scores from 8 to 56. Higher scores represented a greater willingness to try new fruits and vegetables.
Time frame: 7 days