Technion - Israel Institute of Technology, Israel.
Tel-Hai Academic College, Israel.
Appetite. 2024 Oct 1;201:107597. doi: 10.1016/j.appet.2024.107597. Epub 2024 Jul 6.
We Investigated how promoting diverse, healthy food options affects long-term dietary choices. We hypothesized that encouraging exploration of nutritious plant-based foods would lead to lasting improvements in diet. Participants (N = 211) were randomly assigned into two groups for a 6-week intervention: The fixed menu group was given the same large menu every week, while the changing menu group received a new small menu each week. At the end of the intervention both groups were exposed to the same menu suggestions. Food diversity evaluation was based on weekly reports collected during the intervention. Self-reported adherence to Mediterranean diet components was assessed using the I-MEDAS screener. The proportion of plant-based foods in participants' diets was estimated using a 0-100% scale based on self-report. Both items were evaluated using online questionnaires given to participants at baseline, at the end of the intervention, as well as three and six months after the intervention concluded. Results mean(SD) demonstrated that participants in fixed menu group explored a significantly wider array of items 26.33(11.64) than those in the changing menus group [19.79(10.29), t = 4.25, p < 0.001, Cohen's d = 0.60]. A repeated measures analysis of covariance rmANCOVA revealed that short-term increase in I-MEDAS and PBD score were noted in both groups; however, only participants with the fixed menu sustained this increase at months follow-up [diff = 1.50, t = 4.50, p < 0.001 Our findings suggest that manipulating the rate of exposure to food suggestions may affect overall dietary variety. It seems that early presentation with options may increase overall dietary variety and may even support longer-term habits. This study contributes to developing effective interventions and highlights the challenge of promoting exploratory behavior in nutrition.
我们研究了推广多样化、健康的食品选择如何影响长期的饮食选择。我们假设,鼓励探索营养丰富的植物性食物将导致饮食的持久改善。参与者(N=211)被随机分为两组进行为期 6 周的干预:固定菜单组每周提供相同的大菜单,而变化菜单组每周提供新的小菜单。干预结束后,两组都接触到相同的菜单建议。食物多样性评估基于干预期间每周收集的报告。使用 I-MEDAS 筛查器评估对地中海饮食成分的自我报告坚持情况。参与者饮食中植物性食物的比例根据自我报告使用 0-100%的比例进行估计。基线、干预结束时以及干预结束后三个月,使用在线问卷对这两个项目对参与者进行评估。结果平均值(SD)表明,固定菜单组参与者探索的项目范围明显更广[26.33(11.64)],而变化菜单组参与者[19.79(10.29)],t=4.25,p<0.001,Cohen's d=0.60。重复测量方差分析的结果表明,两组的 I-MEDAS 和 PBD 评分都有短期增加;然而,只有固定菜单组的参与者在随访中保持了这种增加[差异=1.50,t=4.50,p<0.001]。我们的研究结果表明,操纵对食物建议的暴露率可能会影响整体饮食多样性。早期提供多种选择可能会增加整体饮食多样性,甚至可能支持更长期的习惯。这项研究为制定有效的干预措施提供了参考,并强调了在营养方面促进探索行为的挑战。