4.6 Review

Culinary Nutrition Education Programs in Community-Dwelling Older Adults: A Scoping Review

Journal

JOURNAL OF NUTRITION HEALTH & AGING
Volume 27, Issue 2, Pages 142-158

Publisher

SPRINGER FRANCE
DOI: 10.1007/s12603-022-1876-7

Keywords

Nutrition education; culinary; cooking; review; ageing

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Culinary nutrition education programs are effective in improving dietary habits and health literacy of older adults. However, there is a lack of programs specifically designed for older adults.
BackgroundCulinary nutrition education programs are increasingly used as a public health intervention for older adults. These programs often integrate nutrition education in addition to interactive cooking workshops or displays to create programs suitable for older adults' needs, ability and behaviour change. Synthesising the existing literature on nutrition education and interactive cooking programs for older adults is important to guide future program development to support healthy ageing.ObjectivesTo determine the extent of published literature and report the characteristics and outcomes of interactive culinary nutrition education programs for older adults (> 51 years).DesignThis scoping review followed the PRISMA-ScR guidelines recommended for reporting and conducting a scoping review.MethodsFive databases were searched of relevant papers published to May 2022 using a structured search strategy. Inclusion criteria included: older adults (>= 51 years), intervention had both an interactive culinary element and nutrition education and reported dietary outcome. Titles and abstracts were screened by two reviewers, followed by full-text retrieval. Data were charted regarding the characteristics of the program and outcomes assessed.ResultsA total of 39 articles met the full inclusion criteria. The majority of these studies (n= 23) were inclusive of a range of age groups where older adults were the majority but did not target older adults exclusively. There were large variations in the design of the programs such as the number of classes (1 to 20), duration of programs (2 weeks to 2 years), session topics, and whether a theoretical model was used or not and which model. All programs were face-to-face (n= 39) with only two programs including alternatives or additional delivery approaches beside face-to-face settings. The most common outcomes assessed were dietary behaviour, dietary intake and anthropometrics.ConclusionCulinary nutrition education programs provide an environment to improve dietary habits and health literacy of older adults. However, our review found that only a small number of programs were intentionally designed for older adults. This review provides a summary to inform researchers and policy makers on current culinary nutrition education programs for older adults. It also recommends providing face-to-face alternatives that will be accessible to a wider group of older adults with fewer restrictions.

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