Effect of a fruit and vegetable subscription in Danish schools
- 1 February 2003
- journal article
- clinical trial
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Public Health Nutrition
- Vol. 6 (1) , 57-63
- https://doi.org/10.1079/phn2002356
Abstract
To measure the effect of a school fruit and vegetable subscription on children's intake of fruit and vegetables after 5 weeks of intervention. Seven primary schools in Denmark. Intervention schools (n=4) were offered a fruit and vegetable subscription comprising one piece per day. Control schools situated in another municipality were not offered the subscription. Intake of fruit and vegetables was measured at baseline and 5 weeks after the start of the subscription. Two methods were used for dietary assessment: a pre-coded 24-hour recall form including total food intake and a food-frequency questionnaire (FFQ) including only fruit and vegetables. Children aged 6-10 years (n=804 from intervention schools and n=689 from control schools). Response rate in the dietary assessment was 31%. At intervention schools 45% of the children enrolled in the subscription. After 5 weeks of intervention, both subscribers and non-subscribers had increased their intake of fruit by 0.4 (P=0.019) and 0.3 (P=0.008) pieces per school day, respectively, but no change was observed in vegetable intake. Total intake increased only for non-subscribers by 0.4 piece/school day (P=0.008) mainly due to the consistent increase in fruit intake. No change in intake was measured at control schools. Only the 24-hour recall questionnaire was sensitive enough to pick up the changes of the subscription, whereas the FFQ was not. Five weeks with the subscription affected both subscribers and non-subscribers to increase intake of fruit. This may indicate that the subscription had an additional effect of stimulating parents of non-subscribers to supply their children with fruit. The results stress the importance of evaluating the effect of this type of programme, and the carefulness needed in designing the evaluation study.Keywords
This publication has 25 references indexed in Scilit:
- Monitoring of dietary changes by telephone interviews: results from DenmarkPublic Health Nutrition, 2001
- Increasing the Fruit and Vegetable Consumption of Fourth-Graders: Results from the High 5 ProjectPreventive Medicine, 2000
- Baseline Fruit and Vegetable Intake among Adults in Seven 5 A Day Study Centers Located in Diverse Geographic AreasJournal of the American Dietetic Association, 1999
- Evaluation of a Health and Nutrition Education Program in Primary School Children of Crete over a Three-Year PeriodPreventive Medicine, 1999
- Reliability and Comparability of Three Dietary Assessment Methods for Estimating Fruit and Vegetable IntakesEpidemiology, 1997
- Differences between respondents and nonrespondents in a multicenter community-based study vary by gender and ethnicityJournal of Clinical Epidemiology, 1996
- Evaluation of a Brief Telephone Questionnaire to Estimate Fruit and Vegetable Consumption in Diverse Study PopulationsEpidemiology, 1993
- Fruit, vegetables, and cancer prevention: A review of the epidemiological evidenceNutrition and Cancer, 1992
- Influence of fatness, intelligence, education and sociodemographic factors on response rate in a health survey.Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health, 1989
- Bias due to non-participation and heterogenous sub-groups in population surveysJournal of Chronic Diseases, 1983