| Literature DB >> 27882266 |
Ada L Garcia1, Rebecca Reardon2, Matthew McDonald1, Elisa J Vargas-Garcia3.
Abstract
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Community-based interventions aiming to improve cooking skills are a popular strategy to promote healthy eating. We reviewed current evidence on the effectiveness of these interventions on different confidence aspects and fruit and vegetable intake. RECENTEntities:
Keywords: Confidence; Cooking programmes; Evaluation; Fruit and vegetable; Healthy eating
Year: 2016 PMID: 27882266 PMCID: PMC5097072 DOI: 10.1007/s13668-016-0185-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Nutr Rep ISSN: 2161-3311
Summary of evidence of cooking skill effectiveness on eating behaviours: quasi-experimental study designs
| Study | Country and study design | Number of participants intervention/control | Age | Aims | Intervention content | Duration | Measurement method | Outcomes | Completers* | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Flego et al. 2014 [ | Ipswich, Australia quasi-experimental | 1526 | 434 | 46–48 years | Evaluate impact of JMoF cooking skill programme on food preparation and healthy eating practices, beliefs, confidence, knowledge and behaviours | 90-min sessions delivered to low SES, likely overweighed adults focused on preparing basic meals that are easy to cook, fresh and healthy. control waiting list | Intervention 10 weeks follow-up 6 months | Semi-structured interviews, self-reporting questionnaires | At post-intervention intervention vs control group reported improvements in cooking confidence ( | 53 % |
| Wrieden et al. 2007 [ | Scotland, UK quasi-experimental | 51 at post-intervention 36 at follow-up | 42 at post-intervention 27 at follow-up | 32 | Evaluate impact of Cook Well programme on cooking confidence, food preparation and choice | 120- min sessions delivered to low SES adults focused on food handling, nutrition, tasting and healthy meal preparation control waiting list | Intervention 7 weeks follow-up 6 months | 7-day diary self-administered questionnaires | Intervention vs control group exhibited: marginal increase in fruit intake by 1 portion/week ( | 68 % |
| Condrasky et al., 2006 [ | South Carolina, USA quasi-experimental | 15 | 14 | 25 | Evaluate impact of ‘Cooking with a Chef’ programme on healthy eating through instructive lessons on nutrition, food selection | 120-min sessions delivered to low SES parents/caregivers of pre-schoolers on culinary skills, taste tests, and practical cooking sessions. controls received printed materials (i.e. recipes) | Intervention 6 weeks | 24-h food recall form food behaviour checklist programme evaluation form | Intervention vs control group exhibited: increased awareness/confidence on basic food preparation children increased number of fruit portions per day no significant changes in fruit and vegetable intake in parents from either group | 70 % |
JMoF Jamie’s Ministry of Food, SES socioeconomic status, IG intervention group, CI confidence interval, CK community kitchen
*% of participants providing answers at last measuring point
Summary of evidence of cooking skill effectiveness on eating behaviours: single group pre- and post-test study designs
| Study | Country and study design | Number of participants | Age | Aims | Intervention content | Duration | Measurement method | Outcomes | Completers* |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hutchinson et al. 2016 [ | Leeds, UK single group pre-test/post-test | 795 at post-intervention | 20–65 years | Evaluate impact of JMoF cooking skills programme on cooking and healthy eating practices, beliefs, confidence, knowledge and behaviours | 90-min sessions delivered to young adults focused on concepts of healthy eating and meal preparation. payment to attend sessions £4.50–£7.50 | Intervention 8 weeks follow-up 6 months | Self-administered questionnaires | At follow-up: significantly increases on F&V intake by 1.5 portions/day cooking confidence score increased by 1.7 (scale from 0–5) others: decreased consumption of snacks by less than one item a day. | 58 % |
| Moreau et al. 2015 [ | Quebec, Canada retrospective single group pre-test/post-test | 144 | >50 | To evaluate if cooking workshops with nutritional education helped to improve dietary habits and confidence, knowledge and autonomy. | Eight weekly 2-h cooking sessions delivered which focused on providing appropriate nutritional advice to older adults. payment of $20 to attend all sessions | Intervention 8 weeks | Self-administered | At post-intervention: small significant ( | N/A 85.5 % attended 7 or more |
| Garcia et al. 2014 [ | Arran & Ayrshire, UK single group pre-test/post-test | 102 at post-intervention | 17 and above | Evaluate impact of NHS community programme on cookery skills, eating behaviours, confidence and self-esteem. | 120-min sessions delivered to nursery parents focused on healthy food preparation | Intervention 4–8 weeks | Self-administered questionnaire telephone-based interviews | At follow-up: increased cooking confidence in using basic ingredients (med: 7v6, | 43 % |
| Abbot et al. 2012 [ | Western Sydney, Australia single group pre-test/post-test | 23 | 19–72 | Evaluate a diabetes cooking course on food preparation and nutritional knowledge | 240-min sessions delivered to Aboriginal females with (pre) diabetes focused on healthful eating preparation and provision of nutritional knowledge | Intervention 18 weeks | Semi-structured in depth interviews | At post-intervention: increases in food knowledge, cooking techniques (i.e. reductions in oil/fat use) and improvements in food literacy. | N/A |
| Keller et al. 2004 [ | Ontario, Canada | 19 | >65 | Evaluate impact of the ‘Men can cook!’ programme on cooking confidence, enjoyment, nutritional knowledge and food preparation | Monthly 120-min sessions delivered to community-living senior males on food literacy (i.e. meal planning, following a recipe, measuring ingredients) and nutritional knowledge. | Intervention 8 months | Semi-structured interviews, self-administered short questionnaire | At post-intervention,: based on a 5 point Likert scale small non-significant increases in cooking confidence (pre 2.6 vs post 2.8), trying new foods (3.9 vs 4) | |
| Beets et al., 2007 [ | Oregon, USA single group pre-test/post-test | 20 | Not reported: ‘young adolescents’ | Evaluate culinary camp initiative on development of culinary skills | 240-min sessions delivered to adolescents to increase food preparation and knowledge | Intervention 8 days | Self-administered questionnaire | Food preparation frequency remained unaltered, whereas significant improvements were reported in nutritional knowledge and perceived cooking ability ( | 85 % |
JMoF Jamie’s Ministry of Food, SES socioeconomic status, F&V fruit and vegetable, IG intervention group
*% of participants providing answers at last measuring point