1. A cooking intervention increased food literacy of students who frequently used the campus food pantry: A Pilot Program.
- Author
-
Carr, Imani Jenee, Cater, Melissa W., and Tuuri, Georgianna
- Abstract
AbstractObjectivesParticipants and methodsResultsConclusionsStudents who obtain food from a campus food pantry may benefit from participating in a nutrition/cooking intervention.Twenty-seven students 18–30 years of age attending a university in the southeastern US participated in the IRB approved study. One 2-hour class was offered each week for four weeks in the on-campus cooking laboratory. Subjects indicated how often they cooked a dinner meal at home and completed the Eating and Food Literacy Behaviors Questionnaire (EFLBQ) before and after participating in the program.The total EFLBQ, Factor 1 (Health and Nutrition) and Factor 3 (Food Preparation) scores, and the frequency of cooking a dinner meal at home were all higher post-program (all
p < 0.05).This pilot study suggests that an on-campus cooking program can increase the food literacy and frequency of cooking meals by university students who obtained items from the campus food pantry. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF