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CompletedNCT05153577

Fresh Start: Increasing Early Produce Intake

Fresh Start: Increasing Produce Access and Intake Among WIC-eligible Children in West Philadelphia

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
50 (actual)
Sponsor
Children's Hospital of Philadelphia · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

Nearly 22% of children in Philadelphia live in food-insecure (FI) households, often leading to reliance on inexpensive, nutrient-poor foods and associated poor health outcomes. Despite this, utilization of food benefit programs is often low, including the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program Women, Infants, and Children (WIC) Farmer's Market Nutrition Program (FMNP). In the prior qualitative study, Investigators found that parents desire to increase their children's intake of produce but face many barriers to produce access; caregivers described a preference for delivery-based, low-or-no cost food programs to increase produce access and intake among children. This pilot trial seeks to assess the effectiveness of a short-term, tiered-fee produce delivery program in retaining participants and increasing produce access and intake among families with WIC-eligible children

Detailed description

Investigators are piloting a produce box delivery program to approximately 50 WIC-eligible, low-income families in West Philadelphia in partnership with the Farm to Families Initiative (St. Christopher's Foundation for Children) and Food Connect, a local food delivery program. Both partnerships have been previously established and are maintained through the Office of Community Relations. The program will be 8 weeks in duration; in the first 4 weeks, all families will receive a free, weekly produce box from Farm to Families. In the second two weeks, the 50 families will be randomized into two groups, each with 25 participants. One group will be asked to pay $5 for the produce box and the other group will pay $10, using food benefits or their own income. Recipes that include foods in the produce box will be included with the delivery along with children's activities (books, coloring pages, card games, etc.) related to fruits and vegetables. Participating parents will complete three online surveys throughout the program. These pre-, mid-, and post-intervention surveys will assess the effect of the program and participant satisfaction. The expected goals are to: 1. Evaluate the effect of different pricing models on participation of low-income, WIC-eligible families in a produce delivery program 2. Evaluate the efficacy of a low-cost produce delivery program to increase perceived intake of produce among low-income young children. 3. Evaluate efficacy of a low-cost produce delivery program to increase perceived access to produce among low-income families in West Philadelphia.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERGroup A: $5 produce boxParticipants receive free weekly produce boxes delivered to their home for the first 4 weeks of the study and are then randomized to pay $5 per box (with continued free weekly delivery) for the remaining 4 weeks of the study. Participants also complete survey at the beginning, middle, and end of the produce delivery program.
OTHERGroup B: $10 produce boxParticipants receive free weekly produce boxes delivered to their home for the first 4 weeks of the study and are then randomized to pay $10 per box (with continued free weekly delivery) for the remaining 4 weeks of the study. Participants also complete survey at the beginning, middle, and end of the produce delivery program.

Timeline

Start date
2021-06-09
Primary completion
2021-09-23
Completion
2021-11-10
First posted
2021-12-10
Last updated
2021-12-10

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05153577. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.