Abstract

BackgroundCooking interventions have the potential to improve child diet quality because cooking involvement is associated with positive changes in dietary behavior. Valid and reliable instruments that are low-cost and convenient to administer are needed to feasibly assess the impact of cooking interventions on dietary behavior. The purpose of the current research is to examine the validity of fruit and vegetable preferences, cooking attitudes and self-efficacy assessments to predict targeted Healthy Eating Index-2010 (HEI) scores among 4th-grade youth.MethodsChild fruit and vegetable preferences, cooking attitudes, self-efficacy, age, sex and race/ethnicity were collected with the Fuel for Fun survey in classroom settings using a standardized administration protocol. Child dietary assessment data consisted of three 24-h dietary recalls collected by telephone over a 2–4 week period by trained interviewers using a standard protocol. Bootstrapped linear regressions examined the predictive validity of fruit and vegetable preference, cooking attitudes and cooking self-efficacy for the Total and 4 targeted HEI components: whole fruit, total vegetables, green vegetables and beans, and empty calories. Logistic regressions were used to confirm the relationships between Fuel for Fun survey items and HEI components. Sex and a categorical variable for race/ethnicity were included as a priori controls in each regression model.ResultsVegetable preference predicted positive associations with HEI Total Score, Total Vegetables, and Green Vegetables and Beans (p < 0.05) Each additional 2 point increase in cooking self-efficacy was associated with a 1.33 point HEI Score increase, even after including BMI z-score as a control (b = 0.667, p = 0.003). Fruit preference and cooking attitudes did not significantly predict HEI total or component scores.ConclusionsThis study provides evidence that low-cost, validated measures of vegetable preferences and cooking self-efficacy predict diet quality in 4th grade children. These results also reinforce the relationship between cooking and healthful dietary behavior.

Highlights

  • Cooking interventions have the potential to improve child diet quality because cooking involvement is associated with positive changes in dietary behavior [4,5,6,7,8]

  • Demographic results, as well as student vegetable preference (VP), fruit preference (FP), cooking AT and cooking SE are similar to youth in previous samples [15, 22]

  • Healthy Eating Index-2010 (HEI) or survey scores did not differ by sex, with the exception of whole fruit score, which was greater in boys (p = 0.04) (Table 1)

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Summary

Introduction

The 2015 Dietary Guidelines for Americans encourages increasing vegetable and fruit intake and reducing the consumption of solid fats and added sugars. Cooking interventions have the potential to improve child diet quality because cooking involvement is associated with positive changes in dietary behavior [4,5,6,7,8]. In the UK, 9 to 11 year old children had increased vegetable consumption and cooking confidence after participating in a culinary education intervention [4]

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