Nutrition Literacy Tailored Interventions May Improve Diet Behaviors in Outpatient Nutrition Clinics

Nutrition literacy examines the intersection of nutrition knowledge and skills; however, no evidence shows interventions tailored to nutrition literacy deficits affect diet behaviors. This study examined the effects of nutrition interventions tailored to individual nutrition literacy deficits on imp...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of nutrition education and behavior 2021-12, Vol.53 (12), p.1048-1054
Hauptverfasser: Marchello, Nicholas J., Daley, Christine M., Sullivan, Debra K., Nelson-Brantley, Heather V., Hu, Jinxiang, Gibbs, Heather D.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Nutrition literacy examines the intersection of nutrition knowledge and skills; however, no evidence shows interventions tailored to nutrition literacy deficits affect diet behaviors. This study examined the effects of nutrition interventions tailored to individual nutrition literacy deficits on improving diet-related behaviors. Five outpatient clinics were randomized to 2 arms. The nutrition literacy and diet behaviors of patients were assessed before intervention with a dietitian and again 1 month later. Intervention-arm dietitians received patient nutrition literacy levels and tailored interventions toward nutrition literacy weaknesses. Differences in diet behaviors between arms were analyzed using Mann-Whitney U-tests and within-arms using Wilcoxon signed-rank tests. Intervention-arm patients improved 10 of 25 measured diet behaviors; control-arm patients improved 6 behaviors. Similarly, intervention-arm patients reported increased green vegetable consumption from baseline to follow-up (z = 2.00; P = 0.04). Nutrition interventions tailored toward nutrition literacy deficits may play an important role in improving patient diet behaviors.
ISSN:1499-4046
1878-2620
DOI:10.1016/j.jneb.2021.07.013