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Innovative Newsletter Interventions Improve Fruit and Vegetable Consumption in Healthy Adults
Authors:SUSAN F. LUTZ PhD   RD   ALICE S. AMMERMAN DrPH   RD   JAN R. ATWOOD PhD   MARCI K. CAMPBELL PhD   RD   ROBERT F. DeVELLIS PhD  WAYNE D. ROSAMOND PhD
Affiliation:a S. F. Lutz is an assistant professor in the Coordinated Program in Dietetics at the University of Missouri-Columbia. At the time of the study, she was a doctoral candidate in the School of Public Health at the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill, USA;b A. S. Ammerman is an associate professor and M. K. Campbell is an assistant professor in the Department of Nutrition, R. F. DeVellis is a research professor at the Thurston Arthritis Research Center, and W. D. Rosamond is an assistant professor in the Department of Epidemiology at the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill, USA;c J. R. Atwood is a associate director of Cancer Prevention, Control, and Population Sciences at the University of Nebraska Medical Center/Epply Cancer Center and a professor in the colleges of Nursing and Medicine, University of Nebraska, Omaha, USA
Abstract:Objective To evaluate the effectiveness of computer-tailored newsletter interventions in improving the number and variety of fruits and vegetables eaten by adults.Design The 4-group randomized trial with pre- and post-intervention measures consisted of a control group and 3 intervention groups receiving nontailored newsletters, computer-tailored newsletters, or tailored newsletters with tailored goal-setting information. Intervention groups received 1 newsletter each month for 4 months.Subjects Baseline surveys were completed by 710 health maintenance organization clients. Postintervention surveys administered 6 months after baseline were completed by 573 participants (80.8%).Intervention All newsletters contained strategies for improving fruit and vegetable consumption. Tailored newsletters used computer algorithms to match a person's baseline survey information with the most relevant newsletter messages for promoting dietary change.Main outcome measures Daily intake and weekly variety of fruits and vegetables were measured using a food frequency questionnaire.Statistical analyses performed Analysis of covariance and Tukey's honestly significant difference test were used to assess differences in the number and variety of fruits and vegetables consumed among intervention groups.Results For persons completing postintervention surveys (n=573), all 3 newsletter groups had significantly higher daily intake and variety scores compared with the control group. Although there was a trend of improved intake and variety with each added newsletter element, there were no significant differences at follow-up among the newsletter groups.Conclusions Newsletters can be effective in improving the fruit and vegetable consumption of adults. In this study, a computer-tailoring system did not significantly enhance the effect of the nutrition newsletters on fruit and vegetable intake. J Am Diet Assoc. 1999;99:705–709.
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