Mangunkusumo Resiti T, Brug Johannes, de Koning Harry J, van der Lei Johan, Raat Hein
Department of Public Health, Erasmus MC-University Medical Center Rotterdam, 3000 CA Rotterdam, The Netherlands.
Public Health Nutr. 2007 Mar;10(3):273-9. doi: 10.1017/S1368980007246671.
Children's fruit/vegetable intake is still below recommended levels. This study applied Internet-tailored advice for schoolchildren and Internet-supported brief dietary counselling (with child and parent) within preventive health care to promote fruit/vegetable intake.
SETTING/SUBJECTS: The study involved 30 seventh-grade classes (16 in the intervention group and 14 in the control group) with a total of 675 children aged 9-12 years, of whom 495 were allowed to participate.
A cluster-randomised baseline-post-test experimental design was applied. During school hours, all children completed Internet-administered questionnaires on fruit/vegetable intake and related determinants. Children in the intervention group received immediate online individually tailored nutrition feedback. For each child in the intervention group, a nurse received information concerning the assessment of fruit/vegetable intake via the Internet to support a 5 min counselling protocol to promote fruit/vegetable intake. Children completed a similar post-test questionnaire 3 months after the first assessment. Intention-to-treat analyses were conducted using multilevel regression analyses.
A total of 486 children (98% of 495) participated (263 in the intervention group, 223 in the control group); 240 child-parent couples in the intervention group attended the counselling. Awareness of inadequate fruit intake (odds ratio (OR) = 3.0; 95% confidence interval (CI) = 1.8-5.3) and knowledge of recommended vegetable intake levels (OR = 2.7; 95% CI = 1.8-4.1) were significantly more likely at post-test in the intervention group than in the control group. No significant effects were found on intake or other determinants.
A compact, integrated two-component intervention can induce positive changes in knowledge and awareness of intake levels of fruit/vegetables among schoolchildren. To induce changes in intake levels, more comprehensive interventions may be needed.
儿童的水果/蔬菜摄入量仍低于推荐水平。本研究在预防性医疗保健中对学童应用互联网定制建议以及互联网支持的简短饮食咨询(面向儿童和家长),以促进水果/蔬菜摄入量。
设置/对象:该研究涉及30个七年级班级(干预组16个,对照组14个),共有675名9至12岁的儿童,其中495名被允许参与。
采用整群随机基线-后测实验设计。在上课时间,所有儿童完成关于水果/蔬菜摄入量及相关决定因素的互联网调查问卷。干预组儿童收到即时在线个性化营养反馈。对于干预组的每个儿童,一名护士通过互联网接收有关水果/蔬菜摄入量评估的信息,以支持一个5分钟的咨询方案来促进水果/蔬菜摄入量。儿童在首次评估3个月后完成类似的后测问卷。使用多水平回归分析进行意向性分析。
共有486名儿童(495名的98%)参与(干预组263名,对照组223名);干预组有240对儿童-家长夫妇参加了咨询。与对照组相比,干预组在后测时对水果摄入不足的认知(优势比(OR)=3.0;95%置信区间(CI)=1.8 - 5.3)以及对推荐蔬菜摄入量水平的知晓(OR = 2.7;95% CI = 1.8 - 4.1)显著更高。在摄入量或其他决定因素方面未发现显著影响。
一个紧凑、综合的双组分干预可促使学童在水果/蔬菜摄入量水平的知识和认知方面产生积极变化。要促使摄入量水平发生变化,可能需要更全面的干预。