Behaviorally Oriented Nutrition Education at a Russian Summer Camp

NCT ID: NCT03077464

Last Updated: 2017-03-13

Study Results

Results pending

The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.

Basic Information

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Recruitment Status

COMPLETED

Clinical Phase

NA

Total Enrollment

40 participants

Study Classification

INTERVENTIONAL

Study Start Date

2014-06-01

Study Completion Date

2015-05-15

Brief Summary

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Healthful eating is a core component of a healthy lifestyle that is associated with lower risk of obesity and chronic disease. Although adolescent health promotion programs have been extensively evaluated and applied in English-speaking Western developed nations, there is very little published literature in the Russian context. Our study seeks to determine the relative effectiveness of a healthy lifestyle intervention consisting of nutrition education at a Russian camp. Investigators will determine the impact of behaviorally focused nutrition education on nutrition knowledge, food choice, attitude, and self-efficacy for healthful eating, compared to standard nutrition education.

Detailed Description

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The project consists of the evaluation of two evidence-based nutrition education programs.

Setting and participants: A random selection of all youth with parental consent for the program will comprise the sample of 40 boys and girls, ages 8-12y. Children with food allergies (to fruits, vegetables, nuts, crackers, corn pops, cookies) will be ineligible for participation. Participants will be randomly assigned to either behaviorally oriented nutrition education or standard nutrition education group (comparison group). Measures: Questionnaires will be completed by each participant at the baseline (the first day) and post-intervention (the last session day). The questionnaire addresses nutrition knowledge, self-efficacy and enjoyment of fruit and vegetable consumption. Controlled observation of healthy/unhealthy snack selection: at the baseline and post-intervention, kids will select snacks first from a menu (individual measure) and then a buffet (group measure) with 3 healthy (fruits and vegetables, nuts) and 3 unhealthy (crackers, corn pops, cookies) snack options. Measurements of height, weight, and waist circumference will be taken prior to the first nutrition education session. Demographics: Investigators will obtain information on age, gender, ethnicity, family socioeconomic status, and parental education level via questionnaire. Procedures: Parents will be informed about potential for child to be involved in healthful nutrition and physical activity at camper check-in. After an informed consent is signed, parents/caregivers and the participant will fill out baseline questionnaires. The parent survey will ask about their child's ethnicity, parental education level, and family socioeconomic status.

Each participant will privately have their height, weight, and waist circumference measured prior to start of study. Participants will attend 45 minute sessions from Monday to Friday throughout 3 weeks at the camp. Each session will be held using different modules from the evidence-based HOP'N After School program. The difference in sessions between the intervention and comparison group will be that the intervention group will get both nutrition education and skill-training component during the session (for example, creating a healthy snack, playing games focusing on enjoyment of fruit and vegetable consumption); the control group will not receive the skill-training component, but will get the same nutrition knowledge as the intervention group. Controlled observation snack tests will take place at the beginning and at the end of the program (baseline and post-intervention).

Conditions

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Health Education Healthy Eating Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice

Study Design

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Allocation Method

NON_RANDOMIZED

Intervention Model

PARALLEL

Non-randomized parallel group design, testing pretest to post-test changes.
Primary Study Purpose

PREVENTION

Blinding Strategy

NONE

Study Groups

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behavioral nutrition education

Set of curricular nutrition education modules, previously developed and based on Social Cognitive Theory, for the HOP'N After-School program, with additional materials from MyPlate. Materials were employed to increase healthy eating behavioral capability, self-efficacy, attitudes, and enjoyment. Topics included: 1) nutrition label literacy; 2) drinking water; 3) eating colors of the rainbow; 4) healthful snacks; 5) benefits of fruit and vegetable consumption; 6) moving more and sitting less; and 7) taking healthy habits home.

Group Type ACTIVE_COMPARATOR

Behavioral nutrition education

Intervention Type BEHAVIORAL

Education aimed at improving knowledge, attitudes, and practices related to dietary intake, with a focus on impacting theorized mediators of nutrition-related behavior.

behavioral nutrition education plus skills

Set of curricular nutrition education modules, previously developed and based on Social Cognitive Theory for the HOP'N After-School program, with additional materials from MyPlate. Materials were employed to increase healthy eating behavioral capability, self-efficacy, attitudes, and enjoyment. Topics included:1) nutrition label literacy;2) drinking water;3) eating colors of the rainbow;4) healthful snacks;5) benefits of fruit and vegetable consumption;6) moving more and sitting less;and 7) taking healthy habits home. Designed to differ from behavioral nutrition education condition by devoting at least 15 minutes of each session to an additional behavioral skills training component. The behavioral skills component was designed to bolster behavioral capability, healthy eating attitudes, self-efficacy, and proxy efficacy with activities such as snack preparation sessions, role-playing games, fruit and vegetable tasting, and playing games that promoted healthier dietary behaviors.

Group Type EXPERIMENTAL

Behavioral nutrition education

Intervention Type BEHAVIORAL

Education aimed at improving knowledge, attitudes, and practices related to dietary intake, with a focus on impacting theorized mediators of nutrition-related behavior.

Interventions

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Behavioral nutrition education

Education aimed at improving knowledge, attitudes, and practices related to dietary intake, with a focus on impacting theorized mediators of nutrition-related behavior.

Intervention Type BEHAVIORAL

Eligibility Criteria

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Inclusion Criteria

* Children attending Yantar, a summer camp in the Northwestern part of Russia (Veshniaki village, Cherepovets district, Vologda region),
* Children of parents who provide permission to participate in a research study

Exclusion Criteria

* Children outside the 8-12y age range
* Children not randomly selected to participate in nutrition education classes for three weeks.
Minimum Eligible Age

8 Years

Maximum Eligible Age

12 Years

Eligible Sex

ALL

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Yes

Sponsors

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Kansas State University

OTHER

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Richard R. Rosenkranz

Associate Professor

Responsibility Role PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

Principal Investigators

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Richard R Rosenkranz, PhD

Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

Kansas State University

Study Documents

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Document Type: preliminary results

Rodicheva master's thesis document with preliminary analyses

View Document

Other Identifiers

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KSU-CHE-FNDH-RussCamp

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id

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