MedPath

Increasing Food Literacy in Preschoolers to Reduce Obesity Risk

Not Applicable
Recruiting
Conditions
Food Selection
Obesity, Childhood
Food Preferences
Eating, Healthy
Interventions
Behavioral: Healthy Eating Curriculum
Behavioral: Improving the Classroom Food and Mealtime Environment
Behavioral: Parent Education
Behavioral: ECE Food Acceptance Training
Registration Number
NCT05977348
Lead Sponsor
Penn State University
Brief Summary

The goal of this clinical trial is to examine the effects of a nutrition education program on preschool children's food literacy and food acceptance, and to examine the added influence of a healthy eating curriculum and parent education on children's food knowledge and healthful food choices. The project will be evaluated with 450 children ages 3 to 5 years in center-based childcare programs serving predominantly Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP)-eligible families in Pennsylvania. Outcomes for children who receive the added healthy eating curriculum will be compared to children in classrooms that only receive the nutrition education program.

Detailed Description

Repeatedly exposing young children to new foods can increase their willingness to try those foods, and they may - with time - learn to like those foods. Being able to learn about, touch and taste new foods can be a powerful tool to foster young children's liking of new foods. This project's goals are to test whether a preschool nutrition education program can improve (1) children's ability to name and identify fruits and vegetables, (2) children's knowledge about food and nutrition, (3) children's healthful food choices during a meal, and (4) parenting around children's eating. Participants will include 450 children ages 3 to 5 years in center-based childcare programs serving a large majority of families experiencing poverty in Pennsylvania. In all classrooms, children will receive food literacy lessons designed to help them learn about different fruits and vegetables, where they grow, and why they are good for our bodies. Children in intervention classrooms will receive food literacy lessons, in addition to lessons on healthy eating designed to improve children's nutrition knowledge. Teachers in intervention classrooms will be provided with materials designed to increase children's knowledge about nutrition and healthy eating. Intervention parents will receive web-based lessons designed to improve parenting practices related to children's eating behaviors. The study will be conducted over a 14-month period, and a variety of child, teacher, classroom and parent outcomes will be measured before, during and after the intervention. The results of this study are anticipated to add new information on ways to improve children's nutrition knowledge and acceptance of fruits and vegetables.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
RECRUITING
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
770
Inclusion Criteria
  • Preschool children enrolled in participating centers
Exclusion Criteria
  • Severe food allergies that prevent children from consuming project foods
  • Presence of a developmental or sensory disability that affects food intake and/or learning
  • Lack of English fluency (children and caregivers)
  • Children not regularly present during days/times that intervention lessons are delivered
  • Parents who are not involved in feeding/preparing meals for children at least 50% of the time

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Healthy Bodies Project Plus (HBP+)Healthy Eating CurriculumIntervention classrooms will receive the Eating the Alphabet curriculum described above for comparison classrooms, in addition to (1) the Healthy Eating curriculum, (2) classroom materials and teacher training designed to improve the classroom food and mealtime environment in ways that increase food acceptance, and (3) parent/caregiver education on responsive food parenting.
Healthy Bodies Project Plus (HBP+)Improving the Classroom Food and Mealtime EnvironmentIntervention classrooms will receive the Eating the Alphabet curriculum described above for comparison classrooms, in addition to (1) the Healthy Eating curriculum, (2) classroom materials and teacher training designed to improve the classroom food and mealtime environment in ways that increase food acceptance, and (3) parent/caregiver education on responsive food parenting.
Healthy Bodies Project Plus (HBP+)Parent EducationIntervention classrooms will receive the Eating the Alphabet curriculum described above for comparison classrooms, in addition to (1) the Healthy Eating curriculum, (2) classroom materials and teacher training designed to improve the classroom food and mealtime environment in ways that increase food acceptance, and (3) parent/caregiver education on responsive food parenting.
Healthy Bodies Project Plus (HBP+)ECE Food Acceptance TrainingIntervention classrooms will receive the Eating the Alphabet curriculum described above for comparison classrooms, in addition to (1) the Healthy Eating curriculum, (2) classroom materials and teacher training designed to improve the classroom food and mealtime environment in ways that increase food acceptance, and (3) parent/caregiver education on responsive food parenting.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Children's Food AcceptanceChange from baseline to post-intervention (~6 months)

Teachers reports of each child's willingness to try and liking of weekly target foods; lab-created measure. Scores for trying (yes/no) and liking (yes/no) are summed to create total scores for each. Scores range from 0 to 26 for trying and liking. Higher scores indicate a higher frequency of trying weekly foods and higher frequency of liking seeking foods.

Children's Food ChoicesChange from baseline to post-intervention (~6 months)

Observed measure of children's food choices when given the option to choose a nutrient- vs. energy-dense snack (live-coded; lab-created measure). Children receive a score of either 0 (energy-dense food chosen) or 1 (nutrient-dense food chosen).

Children's willingness to try novel foodsChange from baseline to post-intervention (~6 months)

Observed measure of children's willingness to try 4 novel foods (The Tasting Game; lab-created measure). The child scores 1 point for each bite of food that is tasted or eaten. Scores for each range from 0 (none tasted/eaten) to 3 (all pieces tasted/eaten). Total scores range from 0 to 12, and are created by summing the points obtained for each food item. Higher scores indicate a greater willingness to try foods.

Children's Food LiteracyChange from baseline to post-intervention (~6 months)

Observed measure of children's ability to name/identify 6 foods using pictures (Food Literacy Scale; lab-created measure). Children receive a score of 0 (incorrect/don't know), 1 (correctly identified on the second pass), or 2 (correctly named on the first pass) points. Total scores range from 0 to 12, and are created by summing the points obtained for each food item. Higher scores indicate higher food literacy or ability to identify foods.

Children's Food KnowledgeChange from baseline to post-intervention (~6 months)

Observed measure of children's ability to differentiate between nutrient- and energy-dense foods using the Snack Selection Protocol (Sigma-Grant et al., 2014). Children receive 1 point for each nutrient-dense food item chosen. Scores range from 0-18, with higher scores indicating nutrient-dense foods being chosen more often energy-dense foods.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Child Weight Status/AdiposityChange from baseline to post-intervention (~6 months)

Child age- and sex-specific Body Mass Indices (BMI) from measured height and weight. Conditional weight gain (rate of change in children's BMIz), will be calculated as the standardized residual of the linear regression of post-intervention BMIz predicted by baseline BMIz, adjusted for child age and sex.

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

The Pennsylvania State University

🇺🇸

University Park, Pennsylvania, United States

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