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Testing the Veggie Brek Intervention

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Nutrition, Healthy
Interventions
Behavioral: Veggie Brek
Registration Number
NCT05217550
Lead Sponsor
Loughborough University
Brief Summary

This programme of work aims to investigate the feasibility and acceptability to both children and nursery staff of offering vegetables to children at breakfast time at nursery. Research will be completed to assess the feasibility of undertaking a subsequent cluster randomised controlled trial (RCT) on this question.

Detailed Description

Children are not eating a sufficient amount of fruit and vegetables to ensure optimal health and development. Interventions are needed to help increase fruit and vegetable intake from the early years of children's lives, to support the development of lifelong healthy eating habits and the acceptance of vegetables as an important element of a normal diet. Vegetables are often refused by young children due to their often-bitter tastes, and so efforts to increase children's intake of vegetables is a health priority. Vegetables are not commonly offered at breakfast time, which reduces the opportunities each day for vegetables to be part of children's routine diets. Therefore, it is important to understand whether children will be willing to eat - or at least try - vegetables when offered alongside a usual breakfast food (e.g., cereal or toast). Preschool children eat many meals in childcare settings therefore nurseries provide an ideal setting in which to test whether the addition of vegetables at breakfast is feasible and acceptable to both children and nursery staff. This research will recruit nurseries in the East Midlands, UK, to investigate whether children and nursery staff are willing and able to offer (and eat) vegetables at breakfast. The study will adopt a feasibility cluster randomised controlled trial design where nurseries will be randomly allocated to deliver the Veggie Brek intervention or usual breakfast every weekday for three weeks. There will be a baseline period and follow-up period of five days where vegetables will be offered to children at breakfast.

Data will also be collected to understand the nursery staff's views on the study and how easy/difficult the study's procedures were to implement (e.g., were instructions clear and could be followed, were there any barriers to offering vegetables at breakfast). This information will be used to inform the feasibility and acceptability of a later trial.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
285
Inclusion Criteria
  • Located in the East Midlands and surrounding areas.

Children:

  • Aged 18 months - 4 years.
  • Weaned onto solid foods and able to self-feed.
  • Eat breakfast at their nursery at least one day a week.
Exclusion Criteria
  • Children with any allergies or intolerances to raw carrot or raw cucumber, or with any conditions which impact feeding or eating in relation to this study (i.e., the offering of raw carrots and cucumber to children in a nursery setting) are not able to take part.

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Intervention (Veggie Brek)Veggie BrekNursery staff will present vegetables (raw carrot and cucumber batons) to children alongside their main breakfast food for five consecutive days every weekday morning for three weeks.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Children's willingness to eat vegetables at breakfast as measured by counts of the vegetables eatenEnd of week 5

The primary outcome is the feasibility and acceptability of the Veggie Brek study intervention which includes an assessment of children's willingness to eat vegetables at breakfast.

Nursery staff's ability to follow the protocol as measured by completion of the data collection sheetsEnd of week 5

The primary outcome is the feasibility and acceptability of the Veggie Brek study intervention which includes an assessment of nursery staff's ability to follow the study protocol.

Recruitment rateEnd of week 5

The primary outcome is the feasibility and acceptability of the Veggie Brek study intervention which includes an assessment of the recruitment rate (i.e., parents who provide consent for their child to participate in the study).

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Loughborough University

🇬🇧

Loughborough, Leicestershire, United Kingdom

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