Several national dietary guidelines have promoted the consumption of 5 to 9 servings of fruit and vegetables (F&V) every day, but children are only eating about 2.3 servings a day. Existing school based nutrition education curricula have encountered difficulties in the extent to which the educational activities likely to result in dietary change have been implemented. Interactive Multimedia provide exciting opportunities for directly reaching students and providing programs that are engaging, based on social cognitive theory, and likely to result in change. This project adapts the successful Gimme 5 classroom curriculum to interactive multimedia format. Based on previous research, Gimme 5 increases F&V availability and accessibility at home and at fast food places by modeling students' asking behaviors and encouraging parents to purchase more F&V through newsletters sent home and joint parent- child home assignments; increases students' preferences for F&V by taste-testing of proven preferred recipes, fun activities, and showing students enjoying consumption of F&V; increases students' skills in F&V preparations by sending recipes to parents and encouraging child preparation of the recipes under parent supervision; promotes goal- setting for F&V changes at alternative meals and snacks; and promotes problem solving skills for initial Change goals not attained. The strengths of interactive multimedia are incorporated by use of modeling of desired asking and food preparation behaviors by attractive peers, use fantasy in animations, encouraging skill building by presenting students with real life decisions and experiencing the consequences of their alternative decisions, tailoring of motivational messages to student outcome expectations, and tailoring of goals to child's dietary practices, preferences and desired schema for eating more F&V. Participation in this study will take approximately 8 weeks per student, or 1 school year to complete. Hypotheses will be tested in regard to dietary outcomes and psychosocial and family mediators of program outcomes. This research will be the firs test of interactive multimedia for dietary behavior change among elementary school students. The project combines the many years of expertise of the school nutrition education team at the University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center and the Multimedia Laboratory at the University of Texas Medical Branch- Galveston with the Houston Independent School District.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Cancer Institute (NCI)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
3R01CA075614-03S1
Application #
6085133
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZRG2 (01))
Project Start
1997-08-01
Project End
1999-09-30
Budget Start
1999-07-01
Budget End
1999-09-30
Support Year
3
Fiscal Year
1999
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center
Department
Type
Organized Research Units
DUNS #
001910777
City
Houston
State
TX
Country
United States
Zip Code
77030
Watson, Kathy; Baranowski, Tom; Thompson, Debbe (2006) Item response modeling: an evaluation of the children's fruit and vegetable self-efficacy questionnaire. Health Educ Res 21 Suppl 1:i47-57
Cullen, Karen W; Watson, Kathy; Baranowski, Tom et al. (2005) Squire's Quest: intervention changes occurred at lunch and snack meals. Appetite 45:148-51
Cullen, Karen W; Zakeri, Issa; Pryor, Erin W et al. (2004) Goal setting is differentially related to change in fruit, juice, and vegetable consumption among fourth-grade children. Health Educ Behav 31:258-69
Baranowski, Tom; Baranowski, Janice; Cullen, Karen W et al. (2003) Squire's Quest! Dietary outcome evaluation of a multimedia game. Am J Prev Med 24:52-61
Baranowski, Tom; Islam, Noemi; Baranowski, Janice et al. (2002) The food intake recording software system is valid among fourth-grade children. J Am Diet Assoc 102:380-5
Baranowski, Tom; Baranowski, Janice; Cullen, Karen W et al. (2002) 5 a day Achievement Badge for African-American Boy Scouts: pilot outcome results. Prev Med 34:353-63
Nicklas, T A; Baranowski, T; Baranowski, J C et al. (2001) Family and child-care provider influences on preschool children's fruit, juice, and vegetable consumption. Nutr Rev 59:224-35
Baranowski, T; Stables, G (2000) Process evaluations of the 5-a-day projects. Health Educ Behav 27:157-66