School of Medical and Health Sciences, Edith Cowan University, 270 Joondalup Drive, Joondalup, Perth, WA, 6027, Australia.
WA Human Microbiome Collaboration Centre, School of Molecular & Life Sciences, Curtin University, Perth, WA, Australia.
BMC Public Health. 2020 Jun 30;20(1):1037. doi: 10.1186/s12889-020-09124-3.
Australia, like other nations, has experienced a shift in dietary patterns away from home cooking of nutritious foods, towards a reliance on pre-prepared convenience meals. These are typically energy-dense, nutrient-poor and contribute to the rising prevalence of obesity and chronic disease burden. The aims of this study were to evaluate whether a community-based cooking program instigated a change to participants' skills, attitudes, knowledge, enjoyment and satisfaction of cooking and cooking confidence (self-efficacy).
The pseudo-random, pre-post study design consisted of an intervention and a control group. Participant recruitment and group allocation was based on their program start dates. Intervention participants were surveyed three times (baseline, 7 weeks and 6 months) and the control group were surveyed at baseline and 5 weeks. All participants were registered via an online website and were 18 years or over. Upon consent, participants were offered four levels of commitment, defined by different assessments. The minimum participation level included an online survey and levels 2, 3 and 4 involved attendance at a clinic with increasing functional, anthropometric and biomarker measurements. Primary endpoints were participants' cooking confidence as a proxy for self-efficacy. Secondary endpoints were dietary intake, physical activity levels, body composition, anthropometry, blood, urine and faecal biomarkers of systemic, physical and mental health.
The community cooking program provided participants with information and advice on food sourcing, preparation and nutrition to improve home cooking skills. The study was designed to explore whether food literacy programs are efficacious in improving participant physical health and well-being in order to combat the rise in obesity and diet-related disease. It will support future use of public health cooking program initiatives aimed at improving food literacy, self-efficacy and physical and mental health. The extensive data collected will inform future research into the relationship between diet, the gut-microbiota and human health.
Retrospectively registered on 16.08.2019 with the Australian New Zealand Clinical Trials Registry (ANZCTR). ACTRN12619001144101 . Protocol version 4.
与其他国家一样,澳大利亚的饮食模式也发生了变化,人们不再在家烹饪营养丰富的食物,而是转而依赖预先准备好的方便食品。这些食品通常能量密集,但营养贫乏,导致肥胖和慢性病负担不断增加。本研究的目的是评估基于社区的烹饪计划是否能改变参与者的技能、态度、知识、对烹饪的喜爱和满意度以及烹饪信心(自我效能感)。
该伪随机、前后对照研究设计包括干预组和对照组。参与者的招募和分组是根据他们的项目开始日期进行的。干预组在基线、7 周和 6 个月时进行了 3 次调查,对照组在基线和 5 周时进行了调查。所有参与者都是通过一个在线网站注册的,年龄在 18 岁或以上。同意后,参与者可以根据不同的评估选择不同的承诺级别。最低参与级别包括在线调查,级别 2、3 和 4 则包括参加诊所,同时进行越来越多的功能、人体测量和生物标志物测量。主要终点是参与者的烹饪信心,作为自我效能感的替代指标。次要终点是饮食摄入、身体活动水平、身体成分、人体测量、血液、尿液和粪便的全身、身体和心理健康的生物标志物。
社区烹饪计划为参与者提供了有关食物采购、准备和营养的信息和建议,以提高家庭烹饪技能。该研究旨在探索食品扫盲计划是否能有效改善参与者的身体健康和幸福感,以应对肥胖和饮食相关疾病的增加。它将为未来使用旨在提高食品扫盲、自我效能感和身心健康的公共卫生烹饪计划倡议提供支持。收集的大量数据将为未来研究饮食、肠道微生物群和人类健康之间的关系提供信息。
于 2019 年 8 月 16 日在澳大利亚和新西兰临床试验注册中心(ANZCTR)进行回顾性注册。ACTRN12619001144101 。方案版本 4。