4.7 Article

Increasing Fruit and Vegetable Intake of Primary School Children in a Quasi-Randomized Trial: Evaluation of the Three-Year School-Based Multicomponent Intervention

Journal

NUTRIENTS
Volume 14, Issue 19, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/nu14194197

Keywords

child; eating behavior; fruit intake; nutrition intervention; school setting; vegetable intake; public health

Funding

  1. European Commission [678024-2]
  2. Croatian Science Foundation through the project Young researchers' career development project-training of doctoral students - European Social Fund [DOK-01-2018]

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Insufficient consumption of fruit and vegetables was found among primary school children in the City of Zagreb. A three-year school-based multicomponent intervention was conducted, which included classroom workshops, cross-curricular activities, homework challenges, educational posters, parent education, and changes to the school food system. The intervention significantly increased fruit and vegetable intake in the intervention group, with 89% of children achieving the goal of increased intake and 25% more reaching the recommended daily intake of 400g.
Insufficient consumption of fruit and vegetables was found in primary school children. To address this problem, a three-year school-based multicomponent intervention was conducted in 14 primary schools in the City of Zagreb. The aim of the study was therefore to evaluate one of the primary goals of the intervention-the increase in fruit and vegetable intake among primary school children. A total of 681 children were allocated to the intervention (n = 300 in the control group and n = 381 in the intervention group). The intervention included 23 interactive classroom workshops, 10 cross-curricular activities, 13 homework challenges, visual exposure with educational posters in classrooms, parent education via the website, and the implementation of new dishes into the school food system. Fruit and vegetable intake was assessed using a semi-quantitative food frequency questionnaire at baseline and after the intervention. Data were analyzed by per-protocol analysis. The study involved 259 children (50.2% girls; age 7.7 +/- 0.4 years; n = 116 in the control group and n = 143 in the intervention group) who completed a food intake frequency questionnaire at both time points. Children in the intervention group showed a significant increase (p < 0.001) in total daily fruit and vegetable intake (before: 332.1 +/- 164.9 g; after: 430.1 +/- 186.7 g) compared to the control group (before: 350.2 +/- 187.5; after: 382.6 +/- 196.8) after the intervention. The increase in fruit and vegetable intake was achieved in 89% of children, while 25% more children reached the daily recommendation of 400 g. The use of the multicomponent intervention showed potential to increase fruit and vegetable intake in primary school children.

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