| Literature DB >> 31036038 |
Nicole Nathan1,2,3,4,5, Lisa Janssen6, Rachel Sutherland6,7,8,9, Rebecca Kate Hodder6,7,8,9, Charlotte E L Evans10, Debbie Booth11, Sze Lin Yoong6,7,8,9, Kathryn Reilly6,7,8,9, Meghan Finch6,7,8,9, Luke Wolfenden6,7,8,9.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To assess the effectiveness of lunchbox interventions aiming to improve the foods and beverages packed and consumed by children at centre-based care or school; and subsequent impact on children's adiposity.Entities:
Keywords: Children; Diet behaviour; Lunchbox; Packed lunch; Systematic review
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31036038 PMCID: PMC6489330 DOI: 10.1186/s12966-019-0798-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Behav Nutr Phys Act ISSN: 1479-5868 Impact factor: 6.457
Fig. 1PRISMA diagram
Summary of included studies
| Study name (First author, year published, country) (Reference) | Study Design and Aim | Number Randomised and Sample Size (Age range of sample | Intervention duration: intervention components, theoretical framework. | Follow-up period from baseline data collection | Measures | Primary Outcome/s | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SCHOOL INTERVENTIONS | |||||||
| Nutritional Intervention to Improve the Quality of Lunchboxes Among Mexican School Children (Diaz-Ramirez, 2016, Mexico) | Cluster randomised controlled trial | 4 schools | 8 weeks: written information to parents, classroom posters for children | 6 months | Lunchbox registry for three non-consecutive days, using a pre-validated comparison list. | Proportion of lunchboxes with ≤276 kcal, fruits and/or vegetables, no unhealthy prepared foods, no unhealthy solids and liquids, meeting the established guidelines of an adequate lunchbox and a healthy lunchbox. | Total fat and sugar were lower in int ( |
| SMART lunch box (Evans, 2010, UK) | Cluster randomised controlled trial (RCT) | 89 schools | 5 months: lunch bag and two food boxes together with supporting materials for parents and children. | 12 months | Weighed food record using specifically designed assessment tool. | Weights of food groups provided (sandwiches, fruit, vegetables, dairy foods, savoury snacks and confectionery). Levels of 14 nutrients provided. | Higher weights of food types in IG (fruits, vegetables, dairy foods and starchy foods other than bread in lunchboxes. Weights of savoury snacks was lower in IG. Higher levels of Vit A and folate in IG. |
| Great Taste, Less Waste (GTLW) (Goldberg, 2015, US) | Cluster randomised controlled trial (RCT) – 3 arm trial | 15 schools | 22 weeks: curriculum lessons and workbook, campaign kit, monthly parent newsletters, poster contest, monthly email to teachers. With a nutrition-eco approach | 7 months | Digital photography of lunch and snacks supplemented by a checklist. | Mean servings of fruits, vegetables and SSDs; mean prevalence of packaged items; prevalence of food items of interest. | No significant differences were observed between groups in mean servings of fruit, vegetables or SSDs or mean prevalence of packaged items. |
| Food Dudes Ireland (Horne, 2009, UK) | Cluster randomised controlled trial | Two schools | 12 months (16 day intervention and 12 months maintenance): videos featuring Food Dudes, small rewards for eating fruits and vegetables, Food dudes homepack | 12 months | Visual estimation of fruit and vegetable portions in lunchbox. | Parental provision and consumption of fruits and vegetables (in grams) in the lunchbox. | Parents from intervention schools provided and their children consumed more fruit, vegetables and juice relative to baseline and control. Provision of FJV 103 g vs 71 g; consumption of FJV 71 g vs 47 g. |
| Food Dudes England (Upton, 2014, UK) (Upton, 2012, UK) | Quasi-experimental | 15 schools | 16 day intervention plus 12 month maintenance phase: series of DVD episodes of the Food Dudes’ adventures, letters to students from Food Dudes, rewards for tasting fruit and vegetables and then for consumption, Food Dudes home pack. (Maintenance phase – consumption is encouraged but with less intensity than intervention phase). | 12 months | Visual estimation from digital photography of lunchbox using previously validated guidelines. | Average daily consumption of fruits, vegetables and high fat/sugar foods (in portions) for children who consumed home-supplied lunches. | No significant difference in in the consumption of fruits and vegetables and high fat/sugar foods from home supplied lunches in the intervention group. |
| School based intervention on Nutritional Knowledge and Habits of LSES Children in Israel (Kaufman-Shriqui, 2016, Israel) | Cluster-randomized trial | 11 schools | 3 months: 10 weekly nutrition lessons for children; weekly newsletters for parents; 3 meetings for parents; training for teachers. | 6 months | Observation to calculate a lunchbox score based on five categories (a score of 0 or 1 for each category and then added together to calculate a total score out of 5). | Quality score of packed lunch from 0 to 5. | Significant change in the overall packed lunch score over time between the IG and CG (1.16 vs 0.41; |
| CENTRE-BASED CARE INTERVENTIONS | |||||||
| Munch and Move (Hardy, 2008, Australia) | Cluster randomized controlled trial | 29 preschools | 20 weeks: professional development for staff, resource provision (manual, fact sheets, games and small grant), project officer support visits. | 20 weeks | Weighed food record of all food and beverages provided. | Mean serves of fruits, vegetables, snacks and sweetened drinks; Lunchboxes with > 1 serve of extra food / drinks; Proportion of lunchboxes meeting categories of balanced, overloaded with extras, unbalanced. | Significant reduction in sweetened drinks by 0.13 serves ( |
| Lunch is in the Bag (Roberts-Gray, 2016, United States) | Cluster randomised controlled trial | 30 Early Care and Education Centres | 5 week (plus 1 week booster): parent handouts/newsletters, teacher/child classroom activities, parent/child activity stations, calendar, workshop and materials. | 28 weeks | Direct observation of contents of lunchboxes using a structured food record. | Servings of fruit, vegetables, whole grains, refined grains, protein foods and dairy in the children’s parent-packed bag lunches. | Increased the number of servings of fruit and of whole grains. |
| Lunch is in the Bag (Sweitzer, 2010, United States) (Briley, 2012, United States) (Sweitzer, 2014, United States) | Quasi-experimental controlled trial | Six childcare centres | 5 weeks: parent handouts, classroom activities, educational stations, teacher training. | 6 weeks | Direct observation of packed food items using a Food Observation Record. | Number of servings of fruits, vegetables, and whole grains in lunches children brought from home. | Increased the number of servings of vegetables and whole grains |
| Tooty Fruity Vegie (Zask, 2012, Australia) | Cluster randomised controlled trial | 31 preschools | 10 months: Food and nutrition policy, parent workshops and resources, consistent messages for children through puppets, stories, role plays, cooking, staff as role models and positive reinforcement, increase accessibility to water. | 21 months | Visual estimation of fruits, vegetables and EDNP foods and drinks. | Number of fruit and vegetable serves, proportion of children with 0, 1, 2+ EDNP food items in lunchbox. | Significant increase in the mean number of Fruits and vegies. |
aOne school withdrew before randomisation. bPaper only reports on provision but consumption data obtained from author. c259 students in lunchbox analysis. IG Intervention Group, CG Control Group, SSD sugar-sweetened drinks, EDNP energy dense nutrient poor
Fig. 2Risk of bias graph
Fig. 3Risk of bias summary
Fig. 4Forest plot – provision of vegetables
Fig. 5Forest plot – provision of fruit