Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT02091154

How Environmental Interventions Influence Behavior in School Lunchrooms

Evaluating the Impact on Lunch Sales and Consumption of New School Lunch Guidelines and Behavioral Interventions in NYC Schools

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
43 (actual)
Sponsor
Cornell University · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
5 Years – 19 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The investigators hypothesize that the new United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) regulations for lunches served as part of the National School Lunch Program will decrease the percentage of enrolled students purchasing lunch, increase the percentage of children taking fruit and vegetables, decrease the percentage of fruit and vegetable servings being thrown away, and increase the total number of fruit and vegetable servings eaten. The investigators also hypothesize that when the regulations are in force, simple behavioral interventions can counteract the potentially negative impact on lunch sales and consumption. In other words, implementing the regulations and behavioral interventions together, the percentage of enrolled students taking a school lunch will increase at least back to baseline levels, the percentage of children taking fruits and vegetables will increase, the percentage of fruit and vegetable servings wasted will decrease, and the total number of fruit and vegetable servings eaten will increase.

Detailed description

This study was conducted in 43 schools in the New York City (NYC) School district in the spring of 2012. The new regulations for school lunches were scheduled to roll out nationally in the fall of the same year, so this study was designed to provide an indication of the impact the new regulations would have. In addition to the regulations, the investigators also tested additional behavioral interventions, in conjunction with the regulations, to determine how the behavioral interventions might offset, or magnify, the impacts of the regulations.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALUSDA RegulationsImplement new USDA regulations assigned school cafeterias. 1. Fruit or vegetable on every tray 2. Meet requirements for vegetable varieties 3. 50% of all grains must be whole grain 4. Milk must be 1% or skim; flavored milk must be skim
BEHAVIORALMarketing KitThis marketing tool kit is designed to encourage purchasing of school lunches. The marketing tool kit included the following components: 1. 56''x72'' vinyl sign with the words "\[school mascot\] Cafe" 2. 8.5''x11'' signs describing the foods offered on a specific day 3. 2''x4'' signs used to name all foods. These were to be placed in a visible location near the corresponding food. 4. Magnetic board displaying a tray onto which magnets shaped as food can be placed to show what foods were being offered during a specific lunch shift.
BEHAVIORALSmarter Lunchrooms Makeover (SLM)Implement three basic Smarter Lunchrooms techniques. It consists of the following components: 1. Place fruit in an attractive bowl or serving dish and set on two places on the line. One of the places should be at or near the register. 2. Give all vegetables descriptive names and write or type them on a 2''x4'' card. These cards should be visible and placed near the corresponding food. 3. Make white milk the most prominent milk in the milk coolers by making it the most available milk and easiest to take.

Timeline

Start date
2012-03-01
Primary completion
2012-05-01
Completion
2012-05-01
First posted
2014-03-19
Last updated
2022-02-07

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT02091154. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.