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Evaluation of Food-Intake Behavior in a Healthy Population: Personalized vs. One-Size-Fits-All

In public health initiatives, generic nutrition advice (GNA) from national guidelines has a limited effect on food-intake improvement. Personalized nutrition advice (PNA) may enable dietary behavior change. A monocentric, randomized, parallel, controlled clinical trial was performed in males (n = 55...

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Autores principales: Hoevenaars, Femke P. M., Berendsen, Charlotte M. M., Pasman, Wilrike J., van den Broek, Tim J., Barrat, Emmanuel, de Hoogh, Iris M., Wopereis, Suzan
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7551874/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32942627
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nu12092819
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author Hoevenaars, Femke P. M.
Berendsen, Charlotte M. M.
Pasman, Wilrike J.
van den Broek, Tim J.
Barrat, Emmanuel
de Hoogh, Iris M.
Wopereis, Suzan
author_facet Hoevenaars, Femke P. M.
Berendsen, Charlotte M. M.
Pasman, Wilrike J.
van den Broek, Tim J.
Barrat, Emmanuel
de Hoogh, Iris M.
Wopereis, Suzan
author_sort Hoevenaars, Femke P. M.
collection PubMed
description In public health initiatives, generic nutrition advice (GNA) from national guidelines has a limited effect on food-intake improvement. Personalized nutrition advice (PNA) may enable dietary behavior change. A monocentric, randomized, parallel, controlled clinical trial was performed in males (n = 55) and females (n = 100) aged 25 to 70 years. Participants were allocated to control, GNA or PNA groups. The PNA group consisted of automatically generated dietary advice based on personal metabolic health parameters, dietary intake, anthropometric and hemodynamic measures, gender and age. Participants who received PNA (n = 51) improved their nutritional intake status for fruits P (p < 0.0001), whole grains (p = 0.008), unsalted nuts (p < 0.0001), fish (p = 0.0003), sugar-sweetened beverages (p = 0.005), added salt (p = 0.003) and less unhealthy choices (p = 0.002), whereas no improvements were observed in the control and GNA group. PNA participants were encouraged to set a goal for one or multiple food categories. Goal-setting led to greater improvement of food categories within the PNA group including; unsalted nuts (p < 0.0001), fruits (p = 0.0001), whole grains (p = 0.005), fish (p = 0.0001), dairy (p = 0.007), vegetables (p = 0.01) and unhealthy choices (p = 0.02). In a healthy population, participants receiving PNA changed their food-intake behavior more favorably than participants receiving GNA or no advice. When personal goals were set, nutritional behavior was more prone to change.
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spelling pubmed-75518742020-10-14 Evaluation of Food-Intake Behavior in a Healthy Population: Personalized vs. One-Size-Fits-All Hoevenaars, Femke P. M. Berendsen, Charlotte M. M. Pasman, Wilrike J. van den Broek, Tim J. Barrat, Emmanuel de Hoogh, Iris M. Wopereis, Suzan Nutrients Article In public health initiatives, generic nutrition advice (GNA) from national guidelines has a limited effect on food-intake improvement. Personalized nutrition advice (PNA) may enable dietary behavior change. A monocentric, randomized, parallel, controlled clinical trial was performed in males (n = 55) and females (n = 100) aged 25 to 70 years. Participants were allocated to control, GNA or PNA groups. The PNA group consisted of automatically generated dietary advice based on personal metabolic health parameters, dietary intake, anthropometric and hemodynamic measures, gender and age. Participants who received PNA (n = 51) improved their nutritional intake status for fruits P (p < 0.0001), whole grains (p = 0.008), unsalted nuts (p < 0.0001), fish (p = 0.0003), sugar-sweetened beverages (p = 0.005), added salt (p = 0.003) and less unhealthy choices (p = 0.002), whereas no improvements were observed in the control and GNA group. PNA participants were encouraged to set a goal for one or multiple food categories. Goal-setting led to greater improvement of food categories within the PNA group including; unsalted nuts (p < 0.0001), fruits (p = 0.0001), whole grains (p = 0.005), fish (p = 0.0001), dairy (p = 0.007), vegetables (p = 0.01) and unhealthy choices (p = 0.02). In a healthy population, participants receiving PNA changed their food-intake behavior more favorably than participants receiving GNA or no advice. When personal goals were set, nutritional behavior was more prone to change. MDPI 2020-09-15 /pmc/articles/PMC7551874/ /pubmed/32942627 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nu12092819 Text en © 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Hoevenaars, Femke P. M.
Berendsen, Charlotte M. M.
Pasman, Wilrike J.
van den Broek, Tim J.
Barrat, Emmanuel
de Hoogh, Iris M.
Wopereis, Suzan
Evaluation of Food-Intake Behavior in a Healthy Population: Personalized vs. One-Size-Fits-All
title Evaluation of Food-Intake Behavior in a Healthy Population: Personalized vs. One-Size-Fits-All
title_full Evaluation of Food-Intake Behavior in a Healthy Population: Personalized vs. One-Size-Fits-All
title_fullStr Evaluation of Food-Intake Behavior in a Healthy Population: Personalized vs. One-Size-Fits-All
title_full_unstemmed Evaluation of Food-Intake Behavior in a Healthy Population: Personalized vs. One-Size-Fits-All
title_short Evaluation of Food-Intake Behavior in a Healthy Population: Personalized vs. One-Size-Fits-All
title_sort evaluation of food-intake behavior in a healthy population: personalized vs. one-size-fits-all
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7551874/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32942627
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nu12092819
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