4.1 Article

Increased Self-Efficacy for Vegetable Preparation Following an Online, Skill-Based Intervention and In-Class Tasting Experience as a Part of a General Education College Nutrition Course

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF HEALTH PROMOTION
Volume 26, Issue 1, Pages 14-20

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.4278/ajhp.091214-QUAN-389

Keywords

Vegetables; Nutrition Education; Young Adult; Self-Efficacy; Food Habits; Prevention Research

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Purpose. Assess the effectiveness of the integration of vegetable demonstration videos and tasting experiences into a college nutrition course to influence students' readiness to change vegetable intake, self-efficacy for vegetable preparation, and usual vegetable intake. Design. Quasiexperimental, preintervention-postintervention comparisons. Setting. College nutrition course. Subjects. Of the 376 students enrolled in the course, 186 completed the online assessments (145 female, 41 male; mean age, 20 years). Intervention. Participants viewed online vegetable preparation videos and participated in vegetable tasting experiences that featured four target vegetables, one vegetable each month for 4 months. Measures. Preintervention and postintervention online surveys determined usual vegetable intake, readiness to change vegetable consumption, and self-efficacy of vegetable preparation. Analysis. Chi-square distribution and paired sample t-tests were used to examine differences preintervention and postintervention. Results. Stage of readiness to change vegetable intake shifted from contemplation toward preparation (p < .001). Self-efficacy of vegetable preparation increased and postintervention self-efficacy was associated with total and target vegetable consumption (p = .001 and p = .005, respectively). The average intake of asparagus, one of four target vegetables, increased (p = .016); similar changes were not observed for target or total vegetable consumption. Conclusion. Online vegetable demonstration videos may be an effective and cost-efficient intervention for increasing self-efficacy of vegetable preparation and readiness to increase vegetable consumption among college students. More research is needed to determine long-term effects on vegetable consumption. (Am J Health Promot 2011;26[1]:14-20.)

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