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Low-income young adults report increased variety in fruit and vegetable intake following a stage-tailored intervention

Posted on:2008-11-13Degree:M.SType:Thesis
University:South Dakota State UniversityCandidate:Do, Mi YoungFull Text:PDF
GTID:2449390005954567Subject:Nutrition
Abstract/Summary:PDF Full Text Request
Objective. The study objective was to determine if a fruit and vegetable (FV) intervention, previously demonstrated to increase amount of FV/day, also increased the variety consumed.;Methods. Variety in FV intake was assessed using a 26-item FV (12 fruit and 14 vegetable) food frequency questionnaire (FFQ) on 1255 low-income adults, ages 18-24 years (control=684 vs. experimental=571) following completion of a stage-tailored intervention to increase FV intakes. The FFQ was administered at 12-months to assess how often and how much participants ate of each item over the previous year. Variety was the number of different types of F and V consumed.;Results. At completion, the experimental group versus the control group had significantly greater variety in number of fruit items (9.5+/-0.1 vs. 9.1+/-0.1, p≤0.001) and vegetable items (11.5+/-0.1 vs. 11.2+/-0.1, p<0.01) as well as greater total intake of fruits (2.73+/-0.09 vs. 2.33+/-0.11 cups, p<0.01) and vegetables (1.87+/-0.10 vs. 1.62+/-0.01 cups, p≤0.001) and a greater consumption of the categories of seasonal fruits (p<0.05), juices (p<0.01) and high beta-carotene vegetables (p≤0.001).;Conclusions. This is one of the first studies to document an increase in FV variety as a result of an educational intervention for low-income young adults.
Keywords/Search Tags:Variety, Increase, Fruit, Vegetable, Low-income, Adults, Intake, /-0
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