• Type

    Randomised controlled trial

  • Outcomes/Outputs

    Research impacts on vegetable intake,Research creates behaviour change relating to vegetable consumption

  • Scale

    Local

  • Setting

    Home

  • Population targeted

    Children - early years 6m-4yrs

  • Focus

    Vegetable consumption

  • Duration

    Short (<1 year)

  • Funding

    Government

  • Total cost

    Unknown

Aim

This study investigated whether choice-offering is effective in promoting young children’s vegetable intake of familiar vegetables when applied by caregivers in an in-home situation

Objectives

N/A

Summary

Participants were randomly assigned to either a 'no-choice' or a 'choice' group. Each child was exposed 12 times to six familiar target vegetables at home during dinner, which is the traditional hot meal including vegetables in The Netherlands. The 'no-choice' group received only one type of vegetable per dinner session, whereas the 'choice' group received two types of vegetables from which to choose, or they could choose to eat both vegetables during the meal. Families received one vegetable parcel including the vegetables for two meals, cooking instructions, a food diary and weighing scales.

Journal article: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0195666315001270.