Whetting disadvantaged adults’ appetite for nutrition education

Objective: To identify the features of a nutrition education programme for disadvantaged adults deemed most attractive and useful by participants. Design: A two-year, multi-method, qualitative evaluation of pre and post data collected from programme participants. Data were imported into NVivo10 for...

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Main Authors: Pettigrew, Simone, Biagioni, N., Moore, S., Pratt, Steve
Format: Journal Article
Published: Cambridge University Press 2016
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/23726
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author Pettigrew, Simone
Biagioni, N.
Moore, S.
Pratt, Steve
author_facet Pettigrew, Simone
Biagioni, N.
Moore, S.
Pratt, Steve
author_sort Pettigrew, Simone
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Objective: To identify the features of a nutrition education programme for disadvantaged adults deemed most attractive and useful by participants. Design: A two-year, multi-method, qualitative evaluation of pre and post data collected from programme participants. Data were imported into NVivo10 for coding to facilitate a thematic analysis. Setting: Western Australia. Participants: Individuals attending the Western Australian FOODcents nutrition education programme that is designed to provide knowledge and skills needed to consume a healthy diet on a budget. Focus groups were conducted several weeks after course completion (five groups, forty-seven participants), observations were conducted during FOODcents sessions (thirty-one observation episodes, 237 participants), and open-ended questions were asked in pre–post hard-copy surveys administered in sessions (n 927) and an online survey administered on average six weeks after course completion (n 114). Results: The course attributes that were found to be especially important to participants were: (i) user-friendly, practical information that could be immediately translated to their daily lives; (ii) experiential learning that involved direct contact with food products; and (iii) opportunities for social interaction. These aspects of nutrition education were described as being highly influential in the decision to participate in the course, the application of the information in their subsequent food purchase and preparation activities, and their word-of-mouth communications with others about the course. Conclusions: Incorporating aspects of most importance to participants into nutrition education programme delivery and promotion may increase joining rates, enjoyment, satisfaction with course content and, ultimately, the uptake of recommended behaviours.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-237262017-09-13T14:01:06Z Whetting disadvantaged adults’ appetite for nutrition education Pettigrew, Simone Biagioni, N. Moore, S. Pratt, Steve Objective: To identify the features of a nutrition education programme for disadvantaged adults deemed most attractive and useful by participants. Design: A two-year, multi-method, qualitative evaluation of pre and post data collected from programme participants. Data were imported into NVivo10 for coding to facilitate a thematic analysis. Setting: Western Australia. Participants: Individuals attending the Western Australian FOODcents nutrition education programme that is designed to provide knowledge and skills needed to consume a healthy diet on a budget. Focus groups were conducted several weeks after course completion (five groups, forty-seven participants), observations were conducted during FOODcents sessions (thirty-one observation episodes, 237 participants), and open-ended questions were asked in pre–post hard-copy surveys administered in sessions (n 927) and an online survey administered on average six weeks after course completion (n 114). Results: The course attributes that were found to be especially important to participants were: (i) user-friendly, practical information that could be immediately translated to their daily lives; (ii) experiential learning that involved direct contact with food products; and (iii) opportunities for social interaction. These aspects of nutrition education were described as being highly influential in the decision to participate in the course, the application of the information in their subsequent food purchase and preparation activities, and their word-of-mouth communications with others about the course. Conclusions: Incorporating aspects of most importance to participants into nutrition education programme delivery and promotion may increase joining rates, enjoyment, satisfaction with course content and, ultimately, the uptake of recommended behaviours. 2016 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/23726 10.1017/S1368980016002512 Cambridge University Press fulltext
spellingShingle Pettigrew, Simone
Biagioni, N.
Moore, S.
Pratt, Steve
Whetting disadvantaged adults’ appetite for nutrition education
title Whetting disadvantaged adults’ appetite for nutrition education
title_full Whetting disadvantaged adults’ appetite for nutrition education
title_fullStr Whetting disadvantaged adults’ appetite for nutrition education
title_full_unstemmed Whetting disadvantaged adults’ appetite for nutrition education
title_short Whetting disadvantaged adults’ appetite for nutrition education
title_sort whetting disadvantaged adults’ appetite for nutrition education
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/23726