When
Consumers use the Nutrient Rich Foods Index,
better choices are made
January 13, 2012 —
With the obesity epidemic impacting American
health care, a new study led by Karen Glanz,
Ph.D., M.P.H., at the University of
Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine and
the School of Nursing, researchers at RTI
International, and the Nutrient Rich Foods
Coalition found that educating consumers to
use the Nutrient Rich Foods approach to
eating is an effective means of promoting
healthful shopping and eating patterns, and
improving diet quality.
The study, published
in the January issue of the Journal of
the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics (formerly
known as the Journal of the American
Dietetic Association), found that among
consumers who participated in innovative,
positive nutrition education designed to
help them identify and choose more
nutrient-rich foods, overall diet quality
improved, total fat and saturated fat
decreased, and consumption of healthful
foods increased.
Additionally,
consumers participating in the new program
significantly increased their meal planning
and their ability to select nutritious
foods.
The Nutrient Rich
Foods approach to eating recommends choosing
nutrient-rich foods from all food groups to
build healthier meals and dietary patterns.
"Educating consumers
about nutrient richness is a simple method
to help consumers identify and choose foods
that contribute to overall healthful eating
patterns," said James Hersey, Ph.D., a
senior scientist at RTI International and
one of the study's authors.
"This study shows that
when consumers are armed with useful
information about nutrient content in a
useable format, they make smarter choices.
Those smarter choices lead to better diets
and healthier lives.";
For the study, the
researchers conducted a randomized
controlled trial of almost 200 adult food
shoppers from February to May 2009, with
participants randomly assigned to receive
either education on the Nutrient Rich Foods
approach or standard nutrition education.
The independent
evaluation was funded by the Nutrient Rich
Foods Coalition, a partnership that brings
together leading scientific researchers,
communications experts, and agricultural
commodity organizations.