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Clinical Trials/NCT02692001
NCT02692001
Completed
N/A

A Randomized Controlled Trial to Evaluate the Impact of Child Friendly Menu Labelling Designs on Food Choices by Parents and Children in an Inpatient Hospital Setting

The Hospital for Sick Children1 site in 1 country163 target enrollmentJune 2015

Overview

Phase
N/A
Intervention
Not specified
Conditions
Childhood Obesity
Sponsor
The Hospital for Sick Children
Enrollment
163
Locations
1
Primary Endpoint
Evaluate patient ordering patterns before and after the introduction of the revised educational Meal Train menu.
Status
Completed
Last Updated
8 years ago

Overview

Brief Summary

Childhood obesity is a major problem in Canada. Children are eating larger portions and have easier access to high-fat, high-sugar foods and drinks. Menu labelling is a promising tool to teach families about healthier choices. The investigators will study the impact of combining child-friendly superhero food labels, fun food names, and a traffic light system on the food choices of children and their parents at SickKids. The investigators will use the hospital inpatient food ordering system (Meal Train) and look at food orders and eating patterns before and after introduction of the revised Meal Train menu. Only the design format of the menu was changed and all menu items remained unchanged. The investigators will also survey the families on their thoughts about the menu. This study will help doctors and dietitians develop strategies to deliver nutrition education to families.

Detailed Description

Childhood obesity is recognized as a major public health epidemic in Canada with over 31.5% of all 5- to 17-year-olds being overweight or obese. The etiology of this increase in childhood obesity can be attributed to trends in children's diets that include increasing access to foods high in fats, added sugars, and eating outside the home with routine exposure to large portions of energy-dense, nutrient-poor foods. Menu labelling and point-of-purchase nutrition information is a promising potential cost effective public health strategy and utilized in the adult population. In this study, the investigators plan to evaluate the impact of a combination of labelling techniques including attractive characters, descriptive food names and traffic light system on food choices made by children and their parents in an inpatient hospital setting at the Hospital for Sick Children. The investigators will assess patient ordering and consumption patterns before and after the introduction of a revised educational Meal Train menu. A crossover randomized control trial design will be employed to identify changes in fruit and vegetable intake, healthy ("green light") option intake, number of sweetened beverages and energy-dense nutrient-poor ("red light") foods chosen as well as the number of children that meet the Canadian Food Guide (CFG) daily serving recommendations. As a secondary analysis, the investigators will be collecting participant's age, sex and weight-for-age z-score (as defined by the World Health Organization guidelines) to investigate any potential relationships between these variables and food ordering patterns before and after introduction of the proposed educational menu. A questionnaire will also be distributed to assess parent and child perceptions of the revised Meal Train menu. The investigators hypothesize patient ordering and consumption patterns before and after the introduction of a revised educational Meal Train menu will promote healthier food selections. While this type of intervention has been studied in hypothetical restaurants and cafeteria setting, this will be the first study conducted in a hospital setting with pediatric inpatients and their parents.

Registry
clinicaltrials.gov
Start Date
June 2015
End Date
July 2015
Last Updated
8 years ago
Study Type
Interventional
Study Design
Crossover
Sex
All

Investigators

Responsible Party
Principal Investigator
Principal Investigator

Jill Hamilton

Staff Physician , Division of Endocrinology

The Hospital for Sick Children

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria

  • Admitted to a general pediatrics or subspecialty wards
  • Fluent in written English

Exclusion Criteria

  • NPO or receiving parenteral nutrition at any point in their admission
  • Specialized diet e.g. celiac, purée, renal diet, or high energy diet
  • Those exposed to educational intervention menu in first 2 weeks who remain on ward following the crossover period

Outcomes

Primary Outcomes

Evaluate patient ordering patterns before and after the introduction of the revised educational Meal Train menu.

Time Frame: 1 month

Specifically, the investigators will determine whether the revised Meal Train menu results in: 1. Increased fruit and vegetable ordered 2. A decrease in the number of sweetened beverages and energy-dense nutrient-poor ("red light") foods ordered 3. A higher number of individual daily food orders that meet the Canadian Food Guide (CFG) daily serving recommendations. 4. An increase in healthy foods ordered (green light options)

Secondary Outcomes

  • Evaluation of meal consumption(1 month)
  • Relationship between patient demographics and meal orders(1 month)
  • Parent/child perceptions of the revised Meal Train menu(1 month)
  • Impact of child-friendly menu designs on food orders(1 month)

Study Sites (1)

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