| Literature DB >> 24996545 |
Stephanie Anzman-Frasca1, Franciel Dawes, Sarah Sliwa, Peter R Dolan, Miriam E Nelson, Kyle Washburn, Christina D Economos.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Children consume restaurant-prepared foods at high rates, suggesting that interventions and policies targeting consumption of these foods have the potential to improve diet quality and attenuate excess energy intake. One approach to encouraging healthier dietary intake in restaurants is to offer fruits and vegetables (FV) as side dishes, as opposed to traditional, energy-dense accompaniments like French fries. The aims of the current study were to examine: children's views about healthier side dishes at restaurants; current side dish offerings on children's menus at leading restaurants; and potential energy reductions when substituting FV side dishes in place of French fries.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24996545 PMCID: PMC4102063 DOI: 10.1186/1479-5868-11-81
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Behav Nutr Phys Act ISSN: 1479-5868 Impact factor: 6.457
Categories used to code children's open-ended responses about kids' meals coming with fruits or vegetables instead of French fries
| 1. Liking/taste. Included the following: | |
| I like the taste of fruits and vegetables | “Fruits or vegetables taste just as good sometimes better” |
| I like the taste of fruits | “I like fruit in a meal for dessert after. Fruit tastes great.” |
| I like the taste of vegetables | “I love veggies and I also love love love salads of all kinds.” |
| I don’t like/don’t prefer French fries | “Because i really don't care for french fries too much anymore” |
| 2. Health: Fruits and vegetables are healthy | “Because this is better for you” |
| 3. Choice: I want choices/variety | “I like to eat all kinds of things. I can always get French Fries.” |
| 4. Treat: Fruits and vegetables are a treat | “Because I rarely ever get fruits and vegetables and I love them.” |
| 5. Other | “I am allergic to msg alots of fries have msg on them.” |
| 6. Don’t know | “I don’t know,” “Because” |
| 1. Liking/taste. Included the following: | |
| I like the taste of French fries | “I like french fries more than any other side dish.” |
| I don’t like/don’t prefer fruit and don’t like/don’t prefer vegetables | “I don't like vegetables and fruit as much as fries” |
| I don’t like/don’t prefer fruit | “I do not eat a lot of fruit” |
| I don’t like/don’t prefer vegetables | “Vegetables don't taste good. I only like certain fruits.” |
| 2. Habit: French fries are what I’m used to | “I always get french fries and im not used to have fruit with fast food” |
| 3. Choice: I want to have a choice | “Well I guess it depends on what I'm eating because french fires taste better with certain dishes.” |
| 4. Treat: French fries are a treat | “Because i like to eat fries when i go out i eat enough vegetiables and fruit at home” |
| 5. Other | “I like to eat meet” |
| 6. Don’t know | “Don’t know,” “Because” |
Note: Spelling and grammar errors were retained to capture the children's voices accurately. Also note that coders selected all categories that applied to a given response.
Coding scheme for children’s menus at top 10 quick service and top 10 full service restaurants
| 1. Availability of a FV side dish | Whether there was at least one FV side available on the children’s menu (1) or not (0) |
| 2. Prevalence of FV side dishes | The number of FV side dishes divided by the total number of side dishes on each children’s menu |
| 3. Default status of FV side dishes | Restaurants were coded based on the default side dish options on their children’s menu: |
| 1 = FV always the default | Included restaurants in which a FV was always the default side dish and restaurants in which there was no default, but all side dishes offered were FV |
| 2 = FV sometimes the default | Included restaurants in which the side dish depended on the main dish ordered: some meals came with a FV side dish by default while others did not |
| 3 = FV never the default | Included restaurants in which a non-FV was always the default side dish and restaurants in which there were no default side dishes (and possible side dish options included non-FV) |
| 4. Types of FV side dishes: | Whether each of the FV side dish items listed below (n = 19 possibilities across restaurants) were included on the children’s menu (0 = no, 1 = yes, 2 = two distinct forms of that item were included as side dish options; e.g., corn on the cob and corn kernels). |
| • Apples | |
| • Applesauce | |
| • Mixed fruit | |
| • Grapes | |
| • Oranges | |
| • Non-fried potatoes | |
| • Corn | |
| • Green beans | |
| • Broccoli | |
| • Carrots | |
| • Celery | |
| • Salad | |
| • Mixed vegetables | |
| • Pineapple | |
| • Baked beans | |
| • Cole slaw | |
| • Berries | |
| • Other beans | |
| • Greens |
Note: The top 10 quick service restaurants were: McDonald’s, Subway, Burger King, Wendy’s, Taco Bell, KFC, Chik-Fil-A, Sonic, Jack-in-the-box, Arby’s. The top 10 full service restaurants were: Applebee’s, Olive Garden, Chili’s, Red Lobster, IHOP, Denny’s, Outback Steakhouse, Buffalo Wild Wings, Cracker Barrel, and TGI Friday’s. FV = non-fried fruit or vegetable.
Frequency of eating food at and from restaurants as predictors of children’s attitudes about vegetable, fruit, and French fry side dishes
| | | | |
| | | | |
| Age group (1 = teens) | -.03 | -.19, .13 | .694 |
| | | | |
| Frequency (higher = more often) | -.06 | -.13, .01 | .109 |
| | | | |
| Frequency (higher = more often) | .03 | -.06, .12 | .543 |
| | | | |
| Age group (1 = teens) | -.01 | -.19, .18 | .955 |
| | | | |
| | | | |
| Frequency (higher = more often) | -.06 | -.15, .04 | .218 |
| Age group (1 = teens) | -.06 | -.22, .10 | .438 |
| | | | |
| Age group (1 = teens) | -.10 | -.22, .02 | .087 |
| | | | |
| Frequency (higher = more often) | -.01 | -.09, .08 | .885 |
| | | | |
| Age group (1 = teens) | -.04 | -.22, .14 | .665 |
Note: Bolded rows indicate statistically significant results (p < .05).
Figure 1Categorization of children’s open-ended responses explaining why they would be happy or unhappy if their kid’s meal came with a fruit/vegetable instead of French fries. One-third of children reported that they would be happy or somewhat happy, and these children are included in the left panel. One-third of children reported that they would be unhappy or somewhat unhappy, and these children are included in the right panel. For the children who would be happy if their kid’s meal came with a fruit/vegetable instead of French fries, the most common reasons were related to liking/taste (of fruits/vegetables; 57.1%) and health (41.9%). For the children who would be unhappy if their kid’s meal came with a fruit/vegetable instead of French fries, liking/taste (of French fries) was the most common reason (77.4%). Children's coded, open-ended responses could fall into more than one category, and category descriptions are in Table 1. Note: * = significant age group difference at p < .05.
Figure 2Prevalence of side dish offerings on children’s menus at quick service (QSR) and full service restaurants (FSR). The prevalence of fruit and vegetable (FV) and non-FV side dishes across children’s menus at the top 10 QSR and top 10 FSR are shown. FV sides consist of all non-fried FV and include legumes. Non-FV sides include all other sides, such as French fries, rice, and biscuits. The solid black blocks represent the prevalence of non-FV side dish options. Together, the remaining blocks show the overall prevalence of FV side dishes, and they are divided to further illustrate the specific FV side dishes available. The most common FV side dish items are depicted individually, and less common items are collapsed into “Other Fruits” (applesauce, grapes, pineapple, berries) and “Other Vegetables” (green beans, celery, mixed vegetables, cole slaw, other beans, greens). Full service restaurants had more variability among their FV side dish items, compared to QSR.
Reductions in kid's meal energy content when substituting FV side dishes for French fries, in 11 restaurants offering French fries and at least 1 common FV side dish
| Friesa | 11 | 277 ± 105 | 100-440 | n/a | n/a |
| Apple slicesb | 6 | 68 ± 48 | 15-140 | 171 ± 74 | 85-290 |
| Apple sauce | 2 | 70 ± 28 | 40-90 | 300 ± 71 | 250-350 |
| Broccoli | 3 | 58 ± 45 | 25-109 | 283 ± 128 | 160-415 |
| Mashed potatoesb | 2 | 135 ± 7 | 130-140 | 180 ± 156 | 70-290 |
| Saladb | 3 | 65 ± 39 | 40-110 | 242 ± 148 | 90-385 |
aIncludes French fries, waffle fries, curly fries, and tater tots.
bIncludes dipping sauce, gravy, or dressing when indicated in nutrition facts (n = 6).
Note: Substitutions were calculated within restaurants and then averaged across the total sample of restaurants for that FV side dish item. QSR and FSR are included. The analysis excludes baked cinnamon apple slices which, at 270 calories, were an outlier. When included, the overall mean calories for apples increase to 97 ± 88, and mean calories saved via substitution decrease to 136 ± 113, and the range expands to -70-290. The analysis includes one restaurant in which French fries and apples are served together by default, illustrating the energy reduction that could be achieved if only apples were offered. If this restaurant were excluded, the overall mean calories for apples increase to 79 ± 45, mean calories saved via substitution increase to 188 ± 68, and the range narrows to 110–290.