MedPath

You Are What You Eat: A Randomised Controlled Trial of an Appearance-based Dietary Intervention

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Fruit and Vegetable Consumption
Interventions
Behavioral: Information-only
Behavioral: Generic appearance intervention
Behavioral: Personalised appearance intervention
Registration Number
NCT01511484
Lead Sponsor
Perception Lab
Brief Summary

This study investigated whether illustration of the facial appearance benefits of fruit and vegetable consumption is able to motivate increased intake of this food group. The investigators hypothesize that individuals witnessing illustrations of the impact of a healthy diet will exhibit improvements in diet relative to a control group receiving only information on the health-benefits of this food group.

Detailed Description

Not available

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
73
Inclusion Criteria
  • Student or staff member at University of St Andrews
  • Has access to email account to receive link to weekly online questionnaire.
Exclusion Criteria
  • Exited study before completion
  • Unable to make dietary changes due to a medical condition

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Information-onlyInformation-onlySelected pages from the British National Health Service (NHS) information booklets \["5 A Day, Just Eat More (fruit \& veg)"; pages i, ii, 12-15, 20 \& 21\] and \["5 A Day, Just Eat More (fruit \& veg): What's it all about?"; pages i-ii)\] were provided to all participants on completion of baseline questionnaires. The pages provided information on recommended portion sizes, meal planning, health benefits and answered frequently asked diet-related questions
Generic-appearance interventionGeneric appearance interventionParticipants in the generic appearance intervention group received images to illustrate the impact of fruit and vegetable consumption on skin appearance. Participants in this group were presented with gender congruent stimuli, constructed by averaging the facial shape and colour of four male/female faces. Participants viewed the gender-congruent set of the resulting stimuli in two forms. Firstly, after completion of baseline questionnaires, images were displayed on a computer monitor. Participants were instructed to select what they perceived as the healthiest face colour, which was recorded by the computer program over two trials. Participants in this group also received a take-home photo quality leaflet to further illustrate the effect of fruit and vegetable consumption on skin colour.
Personalised appearance interventionPersonalised appearance interventionParticipants in this group received stimuli manipulated in identical ways to that received by the generic appearance-intervention group, except the illustrations were performed upon images of the participant's own face.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Fruit and vegetable consumptionup to 10 weeks

Participants completed a computerised food frequency questionnaire to establish fruit and vegetable consumption. Participants were asked to retrospectively report consumption frequency of fruit juice, fruit, vegetable juice, salad, vegetable soup and vegetable items over the past seven days. Participants reported consumption of standard portion sizes and were provided with NHS illustrations of portion size guidelines to assist estimations.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Perception Lab, School of Psychology, University of St Andrews

🇬🇧

St Andrews, Fife, United Kingdom

© Copyright 2025. All Rights Reserved by MedPath