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Hands On Nutrition Education to Improve Childhood Health

The University of Alabama at Birmingham logo

The University of Alabama at Birmingham

Status

Withdrawn

Conditions

Health Behavior
Nutrition Poor

Treatments

Behavioral: nutrition and activity

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT04109768
300002498

Details and patient eligibility

About

The main goals of this study is to better understand how an experiential cooking, movement and mindfulness intervention influence elementary school children at Spring Valley School. program diet, fitness, metabolic outcomes, health literacy and overall well-being. Specifically, the role of the novel empowering experiential learning through a cooking and fitness intervention activities will play on health literacy and metabolic outcomes, engagement in fitness and motivation, and stress levels will be evaluated.

Full description

Nutrition and mindful movement program activities will take place during the school day. Children will be given the opportunity understand the value of quality nutrition in the prevention com-morbidities of treatment and poor lifestyle choices. The intervention will consist of ten sessions. This includes pre- and post-assessments (weeks 1 and 10) and eight weekly 1-hour interactive culinary medicine education sessions. Children will be asked questions about their diet, feelings, physical activity. Height, weight, waist circumference, and grip strength will also be measured. This will take about one hour prior to beginning the education portion of our program. Each week, \a nutrition lecture, a cooking demo and fitness activities will be completed over two-45 minutes sessions during PE class. These hands-on applied nutrition sessions include fundamental of nutrition, cooking skills, cooking skills, and activities. Experiential or hands-on applied learning, including culturally appropriate meal preparation and personalized nutrition and mindful movements, represents a potential tool to increase adolescent health literacy as well as empower adolescent to engage their families. Cooking as medicine helps people make the healthy behavior changes they are seeking because it allows hands-on teaching and learning in a fun interactive environment, without stigma. This strategy encompasses combination of thinking and doing skills that are applied during home food preparation, as well as conceptual and perceptual abilities on food handling, safety and storage, and other factors related to nutrition. The delivery of cooking as medicine programs serves as a way to improve and promote confidence, well-being, and enhance meal quality and preparation practices and offer a valuable platform to engage children and families via inclusive social activities, whilst positively impacting their dietary profiles and health outcomes.

Sex

All

Ages

9 to 14 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • speak and read English able to ambulate student at selected school

Exclusion criteria

  • medical condition precluding participation

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

N/A

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

0 participants in 1 patient group

Hands on Nutrition Education
Experimental group
Description:
Nutrition and activity intervention to improve behaviors pre to post
Treatment:
Behavioral: nutrition and activity

Trial contacts and locations

0

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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