| Literature DB >> 32722381 |
Alexandra Meynier1, Aurélie Chanson-Rollé2, Elisabeth Riou1.
Abstract
Despite their recognized health benefits, intakes of whole grains (WG) are below recommended levels in almost all countries worldwide. This observation highlights the need to increase WG consumption by understanding factors influencing this consumption and how they could be favorably impacted. This review focused on facilitators of and barriers to WG consumption and how to improve the effectiveness of programs aiming at increasing WG consumption. The main methods to facilitate WG intakes in both adults and children seem to be to (i) increase the availability and the variety of foods containing WG, (ii) improve their sensory appeal, (iii) reduce their purchase cost, (iv) use a familiarization period to introduce them to consumers (with a gradual increase in consumed amounts and repeated exposure), and (v) improve communication and labeling to enhance consumers' ability to identify products with WG. These strategies may be used to improve the effectiveness of programs aiming at promoting WG consumption, with a further emphasis on the need to apply them over a long period of time, and potentially to include tasting sessions of new foods containing WG. Finally, these strategies should involve broad partnerships between multiple stakeholders at the regulatory, institutional and industrial levels.Entities:
Keywords: adults; barriers; children; facilitators; intakes; whole grains
Year: 2020 PMID: 32722381 PMCID: PMC7468875 DOI: 10.3390/nu12082217
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Recommendations regarding the consumption of whole grains as included in national dietary guidelines of several countries worldwide.
| Country | Issuing Organization and Year | Age Range | Quantitative Recommendation (Recommended Quantities in Amounts of WG Ingredients) | Qualitative Recommendation (Statement) | Source of Identified Data |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| USA | USDHHS/USDA 2015 (DGA 2015) | Whole population ≥ 2 y | ≥3 oz-eq 1/2000 kcal | Consume at least half of all grains as WG. | [ |
| UK | PHE 2018 | Whole population | None | Choose WG versions/varieties. | [ |
| Brazil | Ministry of Health 2014 | Whole population ≥ 2 y | None | Make natural or minimally processed foods the basis of your diet. | [ |
| France | Santé publique France 2019 | Adults | At least one WG starch per day (no information vs. corresponding quantity of WG ingredients) | Starches can be consumed every day. It is recommended to consume the WG version when they are grain-based: WG bread, WG rice, WG pastas, etc. | [ |
| India | Indian National Institute of Nutrition 2011 | Whole population | None | Use a combination of WG, grams (pulses) and greens. Increase consumption of WG. | [ |
| Canada | Health Canada 2019 | Whole population ≥ 2 y | None | WG should be consumed regularly. Eat plenty of WG food. Choose WG foods. | [ |
| Denmark | Danish Veterinary and Food Administration 2013 | Whole population | ≥75 g/d | Choose WG first—it’s easy if you look for the WG logo when you shop. | [ |
| Norway | Norwegian Directorate of Health 2014 | Whole population ≥ 1 y | 70–90 g/d | Eat WG cereal products every day. | [ |
| Sweden | Swedish Food Agency 2015 | Whole population ≥ 2 y | 70 g/d in females—90 g/d in males | Choose WG varieties when you eat pasta, bread, grain and rice. | [ |
1 1 oz-eq = 1 serving ≈ 16 g of WG ingredients (approximate and most often used equivalence). DGA, Dietary guidelines for Americans; oz-eq, ounce equivalent; PHE, Public Health England; USDHHS, US Department of Health and Human Services; USDA, US Department of Agriculture; WG, whole grain; y, years.
Figure 1Whole grain daily intakes in children and adolescents in several countries as reported by nationally representative dietary surveys. Reported intakes are expressed in grams of whole grain ingredients and correspond to mean intakes in all cases, except for Australia and the United Kingdom (UK) where medians are reported. 1 Recommendation for whole grain consumption for children aged 3–7 years, as reported in the Dietary Guidelines for Americans 2015 (see Table 1 for details; recommendations for children energy intakes from the US Institute of Medicine have been used to convert recommendations from g/2000 kcal into g/day). Sources of the reported data are as follows: Denmark: Danish national survey of diet and physical activity 2011–2013 [18]; Ireland: 13–17 years: National Teens’ Food Survey (NTFS) 2005–2006; 5–12 years: National Children’s Food Survey (NCFS) 2003–2004 [19]; Australia: Australian Health Survey 2011–13 [20]; UK: National Diet and Nutrition Survey (NDNS) 2008–2011 [21]; US (United States): 2–19 years: National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) 2015–2016 [22]; 6–18 years: NHANES 2011–2012 [23]; 4–18 years: NHANES 2009–2010 [24]; France: Comportements et Consommations Alimentaires en France (CCAF) 2010 [25]; Malaysia: MyBreakfast study 2013 [26]; Italy: INRAN-SCAI 2005–2006 [27].
Figure 2Whole grain daily intakes in adults in several countries as reported by nationally representative dietary surveys (except if specified otherwise). Reported intakes are expressed in grams of whole grain ingredients and correspond to mean intakes in all cases, except for Australia where medians are reported. 1 Recommendation for whole grain consumption for adults, as reported in the Dietary Guidelines for Americans 2015 (see Table 1 for details). 2 Recommendation for whole grain consumption for adults, as reported in the Danish dietary guidelines (see Table 1 for details). Sources of the reported data are as follows: Denmark: Danish national survey of diet and physical activity 2011–2013 [18]; Norway and Sweden: HELGA cohort subpopulations (not nationally representative; HELGA is a research project on Nordic health and whole grain food) [28]; Ireland: National Adult Nutrition Survey 2008–2010 [29]; UK: National Diet and Nutrition Survey (NDNS) 2008–2011 [30]; Australia: Australian Health Survey 2011–13 [20]; US (United States): ≥ 19 years: National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) 2015–2016 [22]; 19–50 and ≥ 51 years: NHANES 2009–2010 [24]; France: Comportements et Consommations Alimentaires en France (CCAF) 2010 [25]; Italy: INRAN-SCAI 2005–2006 [27].
Figure 3Main barriers to and facilitators of whole grain consumption in children and adults, as identified from the data collected in the frame of the current review. Factors are presented in decreasing order of their possible importance (from + to −), for each age group separately, on the basis of the number of studies that have concluded that the corresponding factor was a barrier or a facilitator. WG, whole grain. FCWG, foods containing WG.
Description of programs that aimed at promoting the consumption of whole grains in children and adolescents, as identified in the frame of the current review.
| Country | Program Name 1 | Setting 2 | Age Group(s) 3 | Was the Program Focused on WG? 4 | Components Used to Promote WG 5 | Target(s) 6 | Efficacy of the Program to Improve WG Intakes 7 | Program Type 8 | Study References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| USA | WIC Food package (2009 revision) | Home | Children (preschoolers) | No | Federal aid program including provision of supplemental foods within the WIC Food package; since 2009, at least 50% of cereal products in the package are WG | Children & their mothers—low income | Neutral | Gov. (federal aid program) | [ |
| USA | Power Plate | School | Older children | No | Use of emoticons + small prizes as incentives to select healthy foods such as a WG entrée | Children | Neutral | Academic | [ |
| USA | Power of 3: Get healthy with WG foods | School | Older children | Yes | Classroom education lessons; school cafeteria menu changes to ↑ avail. of WG (for a variety of foods); family-oriented activities | Children & parents | Favorable | Academic | [ |
| USA | FIT | School & community | Older children | No | Multicomponent initiative with school (e.g., interactive nutrition education, food tasting) & social marketing elements + community input—but nothing specific to WG | Children, parents, teachers, rep from community-based org. & school district | Favorable for WG bread; neutral for WG cereals (not further defined) | Mix (academic, public & private) | [ |
| USA | CHANGE | School & community | Older children | No | Offering WG daily in school cafeteria menus + school education + parent & community components | Children, parents, teachers & school staff | Neutral | Private (NGO) | [ |
| USA | Be a Fit Kid | School | Older children | No | Food tasting & nutrition education + parents meeting | Children & parents | Favorable | Academic | [ |
| USA | Brauchla 2013 | School | Older children | No (fiber) | Offering large variety of high-fiber snacks (mostly WG) at school | Children | Favorable | Academic & industrial | [ |
| USA | Rosen 2008 | School | Older children | Yes | Gradual incorporation of WG flour in bread products, burritos & chocolate chip cookies served at school meals | Children | Favorable | Academic & industrial | [ |
| NL | Van Kleef 2014 | School | Older children | Yes | Nudging (use of fun shape for WG breads) | Children | Favorable | Academic | [ |
| USA | FUTP60 | School | Adolescents | No | Social marketing + web-based support system for implementation of wellness policy—but nothing specific to WG | Children, teachers, school staff & parents | Favorable | Private | [ |
| USA | Smarter lunch room | School | Adolescents with intellectual disabilities | No | Change from white to WG bread in peanut butter & jelly sandwiches + nudging (changes in how foods are presented & served) | Children | Favorable | Academic | [ |
| USA | The Chef initiative | School | Adolescents | No | Training of school cafeteria staff with a professional chef to learn how to prepare healthy (incl. substitution of RG with WG) & palatable school lunches | Children & school food service staff | Inconclusive | Private (NGO) | [ |
| USA | Radford 2014 | School & home | Adolescents | Yes | Provision for FREE of a large variety of commercially available WG-containing foods at home and WG-containing snacks at school | Children | Favorable | Academic & industrial | [ |
| Belgium | Aerenhout 2011 | Home | Adolescents (athletes) | No | Non-stringent advice sent by email to consume more WG bread | Children & parents | Favorable for girls, neutral for boys (WG bread) | Academic | [ |
| Finland | Hoppu 2010 | School | Adolescents | No | Nutritional education as part of normal teaching and change in quality of snacks served at school—but nothing specific to WG | Children, parents, teachers, school food service staff, school heads | Favorable for girls, neutral for boys (rye bread) | Academic | [ |
| UK | Rees 2010 | School | Adolescents | No | Information leaflet tailored to each subject (according to answers to a baseline diet & psychological questionnaire)—no info vs. content related to WG | Children | Favorable for brown bread, neutral for WG breakfast cereals | Public (FSA) | [ |
| USA | SNAP | Home | All ages | No | Federal aid program that provides money for food supply—but nothing specific to WG | Children & their families—low income | Neutral | Gov. (federal aid program) | [ |
| USA | NSMP | School | Older children & adolescents | No | Before 2012: nothing; 2012–2014: 50% of grain foods served at school meals must be WG-rich (>50% WG ingredients); since 2014: 100% | School meal officers & children | Favorable following 2012 revisions; neutral before 2012 revisions | Gov. (federal aid program) | [ |
| USA | Keast 2011 | Food industries | Older children & adolescents | Yes | Modest change in food formulation to ↑ WG content in foods that are commonly consumed | Industrials | Favorable (modeling study only) | Industrial | [ |
| Denmark | Fuldkorn (The Danish WG Partnership) | National campaign (home & food industries/bakers) | All ages | Yes | ↑ in WG content of several commercial food products, use of WG logo on foods with high content in WG, communication to improve consumer knowledge vs. WG, information materials to assist bakers and retailers => broad partnership with involvement of multiple stakeholders | Overall population & industrials | Favorable (large ↗) | Mixed (gov. & industrial) | [ |
| Greece | DIATROFI | School | All ages | No | Provision of WG-containing foods in school meals, nutritional education material distributed to children & families, health promotion events for children & parents (incl. chef demonstrations) | Children & parents from disadvantaged areas | Favorable | Academic | [ |
1 Full name or acronym of the program; if the program did not have a name, the reference of the corresponding study has been indicated here (name of first author and year of publication). 2 Environment where the program was implemented (e.g., at home, at school, etc.). 3 Children (aged 3–12 years) or adolescents (12–18 years). 4 A “no” answer would mean, for instance, that the program also aimed at promoting other types of foods or healthy behaviors in general. 5 Components of the program that were used to promote WG consumption. 6 The population that was the target of the program: it could be the subjects themselves or their care-givers. 7 Conclusion regarding the impact of the program on the consumption of WG by the study subjects, as measured throughout the study, with three possible conclusions: favorable (when the program was shown to induce a significant increase in the consumption of WG); neutral (no significant impact); inconclusive (when it was not possible to derive any clear conclusion from the study because of methodological issues, lack of information, or conflicting findings) (no study showed a detrimental impact, i.e., a significant decrease in the consumption of WG). 8 In relation to the entity (ies) instigating the program or that provided financial support for the research: governmental, industrial, academic (researchers), etc. Avail., availability; CHANGE, Creating Healthy, Active and Nurturing Growing-Up Environments; FSA, Food Standards Agency; FUTP60, Fuel Up to Play 60; Gov., governmental; NGO, non-governmental organizations; NSMP, National School Meal Programs (US National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs); RG, refined grains; SNAP, Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (formerly called the “Food Stamp Program”); WG, whole grains; WIC, Food and Nutrition Service Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children.
Description of programs that aimed at promoting the consumption of whole grains in adults, as identified in the frame of the current review.
| Country | Program name 1 | Setting 2 | Age & Sex (% Women) Group(s) 3 | Was the Program Focused on WG? 4 | Components Used to Promote WG 5 | Target(s) 6 | Efficacy of the Program to Improve WG Intakes 7 | Program Type 8 | Study References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Canada | Williams 2013 | University | Young (college students) (both; 87%) | No | Introductory nutrition course (1 semester), with no particular focus on WG | College students | Inconclusive | Academic | [ |
| USA | Ha 2011 | University | Young (college students) (both; 88%) | No | Interactive introductory nutrition course (1 semester), focusing on disease prevention with 4h on WG-related topics (examples of interactive activities: food label hunt, WG tasting) | College students | Favorable | Academic | [ |
| USA | Arts 2016 | University | Young (college students) (both; 78%) | Yes (+ low-fat dairy) | Delivery of WG nutrition education messages on the Point-of Selection (POS) sites in dining halls and by email/text messages (daily during 3 wks) (and same for low-fat dairy) | College students | Neutral | Academic | [ |
| USA | WIC Food package (2009 revision) | Home | Young (pregnant/post-partum women, mothers of 5y-children) (100%) | No | Federal aid program including provision of supplemental foods within the WIC Food package; since 2009, at least 50% of cereal products in the package are WG | Pregnant or post-partum women, or mothers of 5y- children | Neutral for objective measure, favorable for self-perceived consumption (6 & 18 mo after implementation of revision) | Gov. (federal aid program) | [ |
| USA | Croy 2005 | Not specified | Middle-aged (health club members, frequent consumers of WG) (100%) | Yes | Interactive educational program with four 60/90-min weekly meetings (topics/activities: health benefits of WG, info & strategies to identify WG & read labels, supermarket tour, WG bread tasting) | Adults | Favorable | Academic | [ |
| USA | Power of 3: Get healthy with WG foods | Home & community | Middle-aged (parents of 9–11y children) (both; 91%) | Yes | Interactive educational program with family-oriented activities (weekly newsletters, classroom lessons vs. WG definition & identification, baking & grocery store tours with a “hunt for WG”, tasting of WG-containing foods) (over 5 mo) | Parents (and their children) | Neutral | Academic | [ |
| USA | Is it Whole Grain? | Community 9 | Older (community-dwelling) (both; 89%) | Yes | Interactive educational program with hands-on activities and tasting of WG-containing foods (three 1-h weekly sessions, with delivery of worksheets, informational handouts, recipes) (topics: WG definition & identification, WG health benefits) | Older adults themselves | Favorable | Academic | [ |
| USA | Whole Grains and Your Health Program (part of the “Georgia Older Americans Nutrition Program”) | Institution (centers for seniors) | Older (resident in centers for seniors, and attending a congregate meal program) (both; 88%) | Yes | Educational program (5 lessons with delivery of handouts) (topics: WG definition & identification, WG health benefits, tips vs. how to include WG in the diet/cook WG) (1 to 2 lessons/mo over a period of 5 to 6 mo) | Older adults themselves | Neutral | Academic | [ |
| Denmark | Fuldkorn | National campaign (home & food industries/bakers) | All ages (general population) (both; 53%) | Yes | ↑ in WG content of several commercial food products, use of WG logo on foods with high content in WG, communication to improve consumer knowledge vs. WG, information materials to assist bakers and retailers => broad partnership with involvement of multiple stakeholders | Overall population (including adults of all ages) & industrials | Favorable (large ↗ for all adults, and for men and women separately) | Mixed (gov. & industrial) | [ |
| UK | WHOLEheart study10 | Home | Young & middle-aged (healthy overweight adults with low habitual WG intakes)(both; 52%) | Yes | 16-week WG familiarization period requiring participants to consume 60–120 g WG ingredients/d (a wide variety of WG-containing foods was provided free of charge to participants, from which they could self-select their preferred foods) | Adults | Favorable (elective WG consumption 1y after the end of the familiarization period) | Academic | [ |
1 Full name or acronym of the program; if the program did not have a name, the reference of the corresponding study has been indicated here (name of first author and year of publication). 2 Environment where the program was implemented (e.g., at home, at university, etc.). 3 Young adults (18–30/40 years), middle-aged adults (30/40–60/65 years) and older adults (> 60 years). 4 A “no” answer would mean, for instance, that the program also aimed at promoting other types of foods or healthy behaviors in general. 5 Components of the program that were used to promote WG consumption. 6 The population that was the target of the program; it could be the subjects themselves or their care-givers. 7 Conclusion regarding the impact of the program on the consumption of WG by the study subjects, as measured throughout the study, with three possible conclusions: favorable (when the program was shown to induce a significant increase in the consumption of WG); neutral (no significant impact); inconclusive (when it was not possible to derive any clear conclusion from the study because of methodological issues, lack of information, or conflicting findings) (no study showed a detrimental impact, i.e., a significant decrease in the consumption of WG). 8 In relation to the entity (ies) instigating the program or that provided financial support for the research: governmental, industrial, academic (researchers), etc. 9 Program sites included, but were not limited to, apartments for seniors, retirement communities, and centers for seniors. 10 The WHOLEheart study was a 16-week randomized controlled trial originally aimed at evaluating the impact of increased WG consumption on cardiovascular disease risk factors. Gov., governmental; mo, months; WG, whole grains; WIC, Food and Nutrition Service Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children; wks, weeks; y, year.
Figure 4Main reasons for success or failure of programs that aimed at promoting whole grain consumption in children and adults, as identified from the data that were collected in the frame of the current review. Factors are presented in decreasing order of their possible importance (from + to −), for each age group separately, on the basis of the number of studies that have concluded that the corresponding factor was a reason for success or failure. NGOs: non-governmental organizations; WG: whole grain. FCWG, foods containing WG.