Designing the Food and Lifestyle Information Program (FLIP) culinary nutrition intervention for adults with mild-to-moderate intellectual disability

People with intellectual disability have diverse needs and experience higher rates of diet-related chronic disease such as type 2 diabetes compared to people without disability. However, they are infrequently included in development and implementation of interventions to address diet-related chronic...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of human nutrition and dietetics 2024-08, Vol.37 (4), p.1109-1122
Hauptverfasser: Asher, Roberta C, Shrewsbury, Vanessa A, Innes, Beth, Fitzpatrick, Arron, Simmonds, Sarah, Collins, Clare E
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container_end_page 1122
container_issue 4
container_start_page 1109
container_title Journal of human nutrition and dietetics
container_volume 37
creator Asher, Roberta C
Shrewsbury, Vanessa A
Innes, Beth
Fitzpatrick, Arron
Simmonds, Sarah
Collins, Clare E
description People with intellectual disability have diverse needs and experience higher rates of diet-related chronic disease such as type 2 diabetes compared to people without disability. However, they are infrequently included in development and implementation of interventions to address diet-related chronic disease. The present study describes the process to plan, develop and refine the Food and Lifestyle Information Program (FLIP) culinary nutrition intervention for adults with mild-to-moderate intellectual disability. The project was initiated by a disability service provider and was guided by the Cook-Ed™ model and inclusive research principles. Initially the disability service provider and academic research team members co-designed pre-program consultation and pilot studies, and draft program resources. Pre-program consultation explored paid disability support worker (n = 10) perceptions of cooking and food skills, nutrition priorities and optimal program format, which guided further program drafting. Program resources and pilot study design were further developed and refined with co-researchers with lived experience of intellectual disability who attended a pre-pilot and then pilot study sessions as remunerated co-facilitators. Key characteristics of the FLIP intervention arising from pre-program consultation included providing cooking task instruction in small steps, enabling participant choice in program activities, promoting an inclusive and social atmosphere, and providing paper-based resources. FLIP intervention co-design was enabled through ongoing input from the disability service provider and people with lived experience of intellectual disability. Evaluation of FLIP feasibility, acceptability and preliminary effectiveness to improve diet-related health is underway.
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subjects Adult
Adults
Atmosphere
Chronic illnesses
Co-design
Cooking
Cooking - methods
Culinary schools
Diabetes
Diabetes mellitus (non-insulin dependent)
Diet
Diet - methods
Diet, Healthy - methods
Disability
Female
Food processing
Humans
Information processing
Intellectual disabilities
Intellectual Disability
Intervention
Life Style
Lifestyles
Male
Middle Aged
Nutrition
Nutrition research
Pilot Projects
Program Development
Social behavior
title Designing the Food and Lifestyle Information Program (FLIP) culinary nutrition intervention for adults with mild-to-moderate intellectual disability
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