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Volume 31, Issue 1: February, 2004
Abstract
A Randomized School Trial of Environmental Strategies
to Encourage Fruit and Vegetable Consumption Among Children
Cheryl L. Perry, PhD, Donald B. Bishop, PhD, Gretchen L.
Taylor, MPH, RD, Marsha Davis, PhD, Mary Story, PhD, RD, Clifton
Gray, PhD, Susan C. Bishop, BFA, Rita A. Warren Mays, MS,
RD, LN, Leslie A. Lytle, PhD, RD, Lisa Harnack, DrPH, RD
The Cafeteria Power Plus project examined whether a cafeteria-based
intervention would increase the fruit and vegetable (FV) consumption
of children. Twenty-six schools were randomly assigned to
either an intervention or control condition. Baseline lunch
observations of a sample (N = 1668) of first- and third-grade
students occurred in the spring of 2000; follow-upwas in the
spring of 2002. The intervention took place during two consecutive
school years beginning in the fall of 2000 and consisted of
daily activities (increasing the availability, attractiveness,
and encouragement for FV) and special events (kick-offs, samplings,
challenge weeks, theater production, and finale meal). Training
of food-service staff and cook managers was ongoing throughout
the intervention phase. Students in the intervention schools
significantly increased their total fruit intake. Process
measures indicated that verbal encouragement by food-service
staff was associated with outcomes. The outcomes suggest that
multicomponent interventions are more powerful than cafeteria
programs alone with this age group.
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