Child-Centered Nutrition Phrases Plus Repeated Exposure Increase Preschoolers’ Consumption of Healthful Foods, but Not Liking or Willingness to Try

2019 
Abstract Objective To determine whether the use of child-centered nutrition phrases (CCNP) with repeated exposure (RE) improved willingness to try, liking, and consumption of healthful foods compared with RE alone. Design The researchers used a 2 × 2 × 4 fractionated within-subjects experimental design in the study: phrase condition (RE vs CCNP + RE) by time of measurement (preintervention, postintervention, and 1-month follow-up), by type of food (tomatoes, bell peppers, lentils, and quinoa). Setting Children were recruited from 2 early education centers; 89% participated. Participants Children aged 3–6 years old (n = 87) who were predominantly white (67%) and from middle-income homes and had parents with some higher education. Intervention Adult delivery of CCNP + RE weekly for 6 weeks. Main Outcome Measure(s) Willingness to try, change in liking, and change in consumption. Analysis Two-level random-effects models were used to account for repeated measurements of willingness to try, liking, and consumption nested within participants. Results Children exhibited greater consumption of CCNP foods at follow-up assessment compared with RE foods ( b  = –16.28, SE = 5.41, t (528) = 3.01; P  = .003). Conclusions and Implications Use of CCNP combined with RE may encourage healthy eating, especially for novel foods that children may typically refuse.
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