[Home]   [Full version]  

Healthy eating is at a supermarket near you

Jan 08 ,Medicine & Health


Supermarket "grocery store tours" could be the key to healthier lifestyles and prevent chronic diseases such as coronary heart disease (CHD) concludes a study published in the Health & Fitness Journal.

Although healthy eating advice is generally well understood, it isn't always easy to put into practice. To address this, researchers at the University of Bristol's Department of Exercise, Nutrition and Health Sciences arranged for practical nutrition-education sessions 'with a difference' to take place in local supermarkets.

The study Prevent it: using grocery store tours as an educational tool to promote heart health looked at whether grocery store tours are a popular and successful method of informing people about healthy-eating.

A "grocery store tour" is a group educational session held at the participant's normal supermarket rather than in a clinical or work site setting. A nutritionist or dietician guides the session, providing information on healthy food choices and demonstrating how to read a food label. Members of the group share with each other healthy shopping tips and recipes for nutritious and enjoyable meals.

The researchers ran and evaluated eight of their own "heart-healthy" tours. The tours were free and covered all the practical evidence-based dietary advice believed to influence risk for CHD.

The study found the tours are an effective way in increasing nutritional knowledge with 75 per cent of the group saying they felt they had learned a lot of new information. Longer-term effectiveness of the tour was assessed using a postal questionnaire in which group members reported a range of healthy dietary changes.

A variety of health practitioners with group facilitation skills and relevant nutritional knowledge could successfully run these tours and they should be considered as an alternative to conventional methods of nutrition education. This may be particularly effective in situations where existing healthcare resources are stretched to meet increasing demands.

Sue Baic, co-author of the study and Lecturer in Nutrition and Public Health at Bristol University, said: "The promotion of healthier lifestyles to help prevent chronic diseases is a worldwide public health priority.

"Our research has found grocery store tours are a popular and effective method of nutrition education for people interested in heart health and for those at risk of CHD and other chronic diseases."

Source: University of Bristol

Related stories:

Glow worms glimmer on cue
(PhysOrg.com) -- University of Queensland researcher and lecturer Dr David Merritt has discovered Tasmanian cave glow-worms are energy conservationists: they switch their lights off at night-time.
Astronomers eager to add to Sky in Google Earth
Since Sky in Google Earth debuted two weeks ago to let the public explore the heavens from their computers, two University of California, Berkeley, astronomers have jumped in to populate Google's sky with the most recently discovered heavenly objects.
Warming Climate May Put Chill on Arctic Polar Bear Population
Some travel agencies touting Arctic tours have been revving up their recent promotions to tourists about the increased likelihood they will spot polar bears in this region where several populations of polar bears live. According to scientists from NASA and the Canadian Wildlife Service, these increased Arctic polar bear sightings are probably related to retreating sea ice triggered by climate warming and not due to population increases as some may believe.
Big Magnets, Big Molecules
Magnets strong enough to stop a heart pacemaker, wreck credit cards and yank tools from your hands will be used to probe the structure of big molecules in a $14 million facility that will be unveiled Friday, Sept. 8 at the University of Utah.
Most Britons escape 'Iraq war syndrome'
British troops serving in Iraq suffer post-conflict mental health problems at a far lower rate than U.S. military personnel, researchers say.
Bronze Age building saved from the sea
A team of archaeologists have saved a Bronze Age building on Shetland from destruction by the sea... by moving it brick by brick to a safe new location.
New laser spectrometer opens the way for more effective carbon trading, drug development and carbon dating
Carbon offsets increasingly are becoming a major component in the arsenal for reducing global warming. Even Bon Jovi, the Rolling Stones and the Dave Matthews Band are doing it: acquiring carbon offsets to reduce the carbon footprint of their tours. As more organizations and businesses start trading in carbon offsets, the need for accurate measurements of carbon emissions also is becoming critically important for fair and exact exchanges.
Airless tire project may prove a lifesaver in military combat
Rarely does one come across a business where the phrase “reinventing the wheel” is not just a metaphor, it’s an operating principle.

News discussion:

Medicine & Health news

[Home]   [Full version]