Differences in Fruit and Vegetable Consumption Among Children Related to Serving Container Color

abstract: Background: Children’s fruit and vegetable consumption in the United States is lower than recommended. School lunch is an opportunity for students to be exposed to fruits and vegetables and potentially increase their daily intake. The purpose of this study is to examine the relationship be...

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Other Authors: Weight, Raquelle (Author)
Format: Dissertation
Language:English
Published: 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.62799
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spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-627992020-12-09T05:00:43Z Differences in Fruit and Vegetable Consumption Among Children Related to Serving Container Color abstract: Background: Children’s fruit and vegetable consumption in the United States is lower than recommended. School lunch is an opportunity for students to be exposed to fruits and vegetables and potentially increase their daily intake. The purpose of this study is to examine the relationship between tray color and fruit and vegetable selection, consumption, and waste at lunch. Methods: Study participants (n=1469) were elementary and middle school students who ate school lunch on the day of data collection. Photographs and weights (to nearest 2 g) were taken of fruits and vegetables on students’ trays before and after lunch. Trained research assistants viewed photographs and sorted trays into variable categories: color of main tray, presence/absence of secondary fruit/vegetable container, and color of secondary fruit/vegetable container. Fruit and vegetable selection, consumption, and waste were calculated using tray weights. Negative binomial regression models adjusted for gender, grade level, race/ethnicity, free/reduced price lunch status, and within-school similarities were used to examine relationships between tray color and fruit and vegetable selection, consumption, and waste. Results: Findings indicated that students with a light tray selected (IRR= 0.44), consumed (IRR=0.73) and wasted (IRR=0.81) less fruit and vegetables. Students without a secondary fruit/vegetable container selected (IRR=0.66) and consumed (IRR=0.49) less fruit and vegetables compared to those with a secondary container. Light or clear secondary fruit and vegetable containers were related to increased selection (IRR=2.06 light, 2.30 clear) and consumption (IRR=1.95 light, 2.78 clear) compared to dark secondary containers, while light secondary containers were related to decreased waste (IRR= 0.57). Conclusion: Tray color may influence fruit and vegetable selection, consumption, and waste among students eating school lunch. Further research is needed to determine if there is a cause and effect relationship. If so, adjusting container colors may be a practical intervention for schools hoping to increase fruit and vegetable intake among students. Dissertation/Thesis Weight, Raquelle (Author) Bruening, Meg (Advisor) Adams, Marc (Committee member) Martinelli, Sarah (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Nutrition Public health consumption container color fruits and vegetables school lunch selection waste eng 58 pages Masters Thesis Nutrition 2020 Masters Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.62799 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ 2020
collection NDLTD
language English
format Dissertation
sources NDLTD
topic Nutrition
Public health
consumption
container color
fruits and vegetables
school lunch
selection
waste
spellingShingle Nutrition
Public health
consumption
container color
fruits and vegetables
school lunch
selection
waste
Differences in Fruit and Vegetable Consumption Among Children Related to Serving Container Color
description abstract: Background: Children’s fruit and vegetable consumption in the United States is lower than recommended. School lunch is an opportunity for students to be exposed to fruits and vegetables and potentially increase their daily intake. The purpose of this study is to examine the relationship between tray color and fruit and vegetable selection, consumption, and waste at lunch. Methods: Study participants (n=1469) were elementary and middle school students who ate school lunch on the day of data collection. Photographs and weights (to nearest 2 g) were taken of fruits and vegetables on students’ trays before and after lunch. Trained research assistants viewed photographs and sorted trays into variable categories: color of main tray, presence/absence of secondary fruit/vegetable container, and color of secondary fruit/vegetable container. Fruit and vegetable selection, consumption, and waste were calculated using tray weights. Negative binomial regression models adjusted for gender, grade level, race/ethnicity, free/reduced price lunch status, and within-school similarities were used to examine relationships between tray color and fruit and vegetable selection, consumption, and waste. Results: Findings indicated that students with a light tray selected (IRR= 0.44), consumed (IRR=0.73) and wasted (IRR=0.81) less fruit and vegetables. Students without a secondary fruit/vegetable container selected (IRR=0.66) and consumed (IRR=0.49) less fruit and vegetables compared to those with a secondary container. Light or clear secondary fruit and vegetable containers were related to increased selection (IRR=2.06 light, 2.30 clear) and consumption (IRR=1.95 light, 2.78 clear) compared to dark secondary containers, while light secondary containers were related to decreased waste (IRR= 0.57). Conclusion: Tray color may influence fruit and vegetable selection, consumption, and waste among students eating school lunch. Further research is needed to determine if there is a cause and effect relationship. If so, adjusting container colors may be a practical intervention for schools hoping to increase fruit and vegetable intake among students. === Dissertation/Thesis === Masters Thesis Nutrition 2020
author2 Weight, Raquelle (Author)
author_facet Weight, Raquelle (Author)
title Differences in Fruit and Vegetable Consumption Among Children Related to Serving Container Color
title_short Differences in Fruit and Vegetable Consumption Among Children Related to Serving Container Color
title_full Differences in Fruit and Vegetable Consumption Among Children Related to Serving Container Color
title_fullStr Differences in Fruit and Vegetable Consumption Among Children Related to Serving Container Color
title_full_unstemmed Differences in Fruit and Vegetable Consumption Among Children Related to Serving Container Color
title_sort differences in fruit and vegetable consumption among children related to serving container color
publishDate 2020
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.62799
_version_ 1719368818095030272