Increasing fruit and vegetable consumption through worksites and families in the treatwell 5-a-day study

Auteur(s) :
Cohen NL., Hunt MK., Lederman R., ., Peterson-sweeney K., Sorensen G., Gerstein DE., Stoddard AM.
Date :
Jan, 1999
Source(s) :
American journal of public health. #89:1 p54-60
Adresse :
Division of Cancer Epidemiology and Control, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Boston, MA 02115, [email protected]

Sommaire de l'article

We report on the results of the Treatwell 5-a-Day study, a worksite intervention aimed at increasing consumption of fruits and vegetables.

METHODS: Twenty-two worksites were randomly assigned to 3 groups:
(1) a minimal intervention control group,
(2) a worksite intervention,
and (3) a worksite-plus-family intervention.
The interventions used community-organizing strategies and were structured to target multiple levels of influence, following a socioecological model. Data were collected by self-administered employee surveys before and after the intervention; the response rate was 87% (n = 1359) at baseline and 76% (n = 1306) at follow-up. A process tracking system was used to document intervention delivery.

RESULTS: After control for worksite, gender, education, occupation, race/ethnicity, and living situation, total fruit and vegetable intake increased by 19% in the worksite-plus-family group, 7% in the worksite intervention group and 0% in the control group (P = .05). These changes reflect a one half serving increase among workers in the worksite-plus-family group compared with the control group (P = .018).

CONCLUSIONS: The worksite-plus-family intervention was more successful in increasing fruit and vegetable consumption than was the worksite intervention. Worksite interventions involving family members appear to be a promising strategy for influencing workers' dietary habits."

Source : Pubmed
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