Abstract

Young adult university students are a priority population for nutrition intervention. This study assessed the feasibility and preliminary efficacy of the EATS (Eating Advice to Students) brief (i.e., single use) web-based nutrition intervention for young adult university students. A 3-month pilot randomized controlled trial (RCT) was conducted with 124 students aged 17–35 from the University of Newcastle, Australia. Participants were randomized to EATS (n = 62) or attention control (n = 62). EATS aimed to improve four target eating behaviors (vegetables, fruit, discretionary foods, breakfast). Primary outcomes were feasibility (recruitment, retention, usage, program acceptability). Recruitment and retention numbers were recorded, the program acceptability was assessed by a process evaluation survey and the website usage was objectively tracked. Preliminary efficacy was assessed via changes in diet quality (primary), fruit, vegetables, discretionary foods and breakfast intake, measured using Food Frequency Questionnaire. Recruitment was completed in five weeks. Retention was 73% (90/124) at 3-months. Intervention participants used EATS 1.5 ± 1.0 times. Satisfaction with EATS was rated at 4.04 ± 0.74 (maximum five). Intervention participants significantly decreased the percentage energy/day from discretionary foods compared with control (−4.8%, 95%CI −8.6, −1.1, p = 0.012, d = −0.34). No significant between-group differences were observed for diet quality, fruit, vegetable or breakfast intakes. EATS demonstrated high feasibility, particularly for reach and acceptability. The university setting and a brief web-based intervention show promise in engaging young adults to improve their eating behaviors.

Highlights

  • Young adult (17–35 years) university students are in a transitional life stage and setting, where major life changes can have a negative impact on lifestyle behaviors

  • Unhealthy eating behaviors are of particular concern among young adult university students due to their high prevalence [3] and likelihood of tracking into middle age [4], and because of the associations with poorer mental health [5,6], lower academic achievement [7]

  • Among the 124 participants enrolled in the study, the most successful recruitment method was via the University social media pages (41%), followed by promotion via the university teaching staff (36%) and posters displayed across university campuses (17%)

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Summary

Introduction

Young adult (17–35 years) university students are in a transitional life stage and setting, where major life changes can have a negative impact on lifestyle behaviors. Employment, social life, and the development of self-identity and self-efficacy are some of the impacting factors, on top of university study [1,2]. Unhealthy eating behaviors are of particular concern among young adult university students due to their high prevalence [3] and likelihood of tracking into middle age [4], and because of the associations with poorer mental health [5,6], lower academic achievement [7]. There is a clear need for nutrition intervention in the university setting. Developing effective nutrition interventions for university students is challenging as they are a unique population group and difficult to engage [10,11]. The heterogeneity of existing nutrition interventions in this group makes determining the most effective intervention difficult [3,11]

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