Study Protocol for a Controlled Trial of Nutrition Education Intervention about Celiac Disease in Primary School: ZELIAKIDE Project
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Description
2.2. Participants
2.3. Sample Size Calculation
2.4. Allocation to Groups
2.5. Intervention
2.5.1. Intervention Design
2.5.2. Study Procedure
2.6. Outcome Measures
2.6.1. Primary Outcomes
2.6.2. Secondary Outcomes
- Opinion of the parents/guardians of the children in relation to the project: it will be completed by parents/guardians, online and without the presence of any member of the research group.
- Opinion of the children about the project reported by their parents/guardians: it will be completed by parents/guardians, online and without the presence of any member of the research group.
2.7. Data Management and Monitoring
2.8. Statistical Analysis
3. Discussion
4. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Competence | Question | Response | |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Do you know which foods are found in the different parts of the food pyramid? | Yes/No/No response | |
Which foods are at the top of the pyramid? | Open question | ||
Which foods are at the bottom of the pyramid? | Open question | ||
Of the food pairs below, which do you think is highest in the food pyramid? | Tomato/Sweet, Pizza/Rice, Bread/Juice, Olive oil/Red meat, Potato/Ham | ||
2 | Of the foods you eat during the day, do you know which are unhealthy? | Yes/No | |
Which are the unhealthy foods you eat? | Open question | ||
Are the foods that are often featured in advertisements usually healthy? | Yes/No/There is a bit of everything | ||
How much fruit and vegetables should you eat per day? | Open question | ||
What do you think you should improve your diet, for example, by eating more fruit, less sweets? | Open question | ||
3 | How many days a week do you usually take a healthy lunch to school (fruit, dairy products, wholemeal bread…)? | Scale 0 days–5 days | |
Of the foods at the top of the food pyramid, how many do you eat at the weekend? | I eat them on Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays, more than once a day. I eat them on Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays, once a day. I only eat them one day at the weekend. I don’t eat them every weekend, only once in a while. | ||
Do you think it is important to eat a healthy diet? | No, if you do sport it is enough Yes, it is important but it is better for everyone to eat what they want Yes, it is very important for me. | ||
With what you have learned in these sessions, do you think you are able to improve your diet? | Yes, I know what mistakes I make in my diet and I am able to improve it Yes, I have learned a lot but I am not able to improve my diet No, I have not learned enough | ||
In the last month, have you eaten more, less or the same amount of the following food groups? (dairy products, fruits, vegetables, meat, fish, pulses, cereals, sweets) | Less/Equal/More/I do not know/No response | ||
4 | How much do you know about CD? | Scale 0 (nothing)–4 (much) | |
What symptoms do people with CD have? | Open question | ||
When do people with CD develop symptoms? | Open question | ||
What compound in food is harmful to people with CD? | Open question | ||
5 | How do you think people with CD feel? | Open question | |
Does a person with CD enjoy eating? | Scale 0 (nothing)–4 (much) | ||
What would you do if it was your birthday and a classmate had CD? | Bring the cake that I like the most. Bring the cake that I like the most and another gluten-free cake for the person with CD. Bring a gluten-free cake for everyone. No response. | ||
6 | Where is the gluten? | Open question | |
What makes a dough elastic? | Gluten Water I do not know | ||
How can we know (without experimenting) whether a food contains gluten or not? | Open question | ||
Which symbols indicate that a food does not contain gluten? | Open question | ||
7 | Which of the following foods a person with CD cannot eat? | Meat and fish Eggs and dairy Fruit and vegetables Wheat-based products: biscuits, bread and pasta Rice and maize Sweets They can eat anything I do not know | |
From the following list of foods, which ones may contain gluten? | Raw rice, raw beans, fresh fruits, fresh vegetables, natural dairy products, fresh meat or fish, biscuits, some sweets, sweetened cocoa powder, some ice-creams, chocolate | ||
Can a prepared food (cream of vegetables, prepared beans…) have gluten, even if it is made from gluten-free ingredients? | Yes/No | ||
8 | Please rate these sentences according to your level of agreement. | In order to detect gluten, laboratory experiments must be carried out. | Scale 1 (not agree)–5 (very agree) |
It is important for scientists to do experiments. | Scale 1 (not agree)–5 (very agree) | ||
In the future I would like to become a scientist. | Scale 1 (not agree)–5 (very agree) | ||
Researchers are crazy, weird and male. | Scale 1 (not agree)–5 (very agree) |
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Competence | Learning Outcome | Activity | Topic Day |
---|---|---|---|
The student should be able to place the food groups in the food pyramid. | Bloom level 3. Application The student adequately organises different foods in the pyramid. | Game about the food pyramid. | Day 1. Food groups Day 2. Healthy diet |
The student should be able to identify dietary errors and make recommendations for its modification. | Bloom level 4. Analysis The student identifies foods to be consumed infrequently. Bloom level 6. Evaluation The student offers recommendations to adapt its consumption. | Complete and adapt a 24 h recall. | Day 1. Food groups Day 2. Healthy diet |
The student should be able to consume less food from the top of the pyramid. | Bloom level 6. Evaluation Students consume less unhealthy food than before the activities. | Game about the food pyramid. Complete and adapt a 24 h recall. Healthy snacks challenge. | Days 2 to 8. Healthy snacks challenge. Day 2. Healthy diet (transversally) |
The student should be able to explain what celiac disease is. | Bloom level 2. Understanding The student acknowledges that gluten harms people with celiac disease and makes them sick. The student concludes that people with CD should follow a gluten-free diet. | Game to learn the characteristics of the disease. | Day 3. Celiac Disease |
The student should be able to analyse gluten | Bloom level 3. Application The student manipulates gluten and finds it. The student figures out that gluten gives elasticity to the doughs. Bloom level 4. Analysis Students deduce where gluten is by analysing food labels. | Experiment 1: Learning by doing: pasta made with different types of flour. Experiment 2: Food analysis through the senses. | Day 4. What gluten is Day 5. Where gluten is (transversally) |
The student should be able to classify food groups according to gluten content. | Bloom level 4. Analysis The student identifies the food groups that contain gluten: placing them in cereals. The student concludes that processed foods may contain gluten. | Experiment 3: Gluten detection experiment, immunochromatography. Experiment 4: Study of food labelling. | Day 6. Food labels Day 7.Where gluten is Day 4. What gluten is (transversally) |
The student should be able to understand the work of scientists, to know that the gluten content of foods is analysed through experimentation. | Bloom level 6. Evaluation The student is able to perform experimental work, observe, analyse and evaluate the results. | All the experiments. | Day 4. What gluten is Day 5. Differences between gluten and gluten free foods Day 6. Food labels Day 7. Where gluten is |
The student should be able to assess the impact of own actions on others. | Bloom level 6. Evaluation The student demonstrates empathetic behaviour. The student selects actions and behaviours to overcome differences between people. | Game to learn the characteristics of the disease. Case study to work on inclusion: discussion. | Day 8. Social inclusion of people with celiac disease Day 3. Celiac Disease (transversally) Day 5. Differences between gluten and gluten free foods (transversally) |
Intervention Group | Control Group | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
Week | Topic Session 1 | Topic Session 2 | Challenge | No intervention |
1 | Day 1. Food groups | Day 2. Healthy diet | “Healthy snacks challenge” | |
2 | Day 3. Celiac Disease | Day 4. What gluten is | ||
3 | Day 5. Differences between gluten containing and gluten free foods | Day 6. Food labels | ||
4 | Day 7. Where gluten is | Day 8. Social inclusion of people with celiac disease |
Competence | Outcome Measures |
---|---|
The student should be able to place the food groups in the food pyramid. | Change in nutrition knowledge |
The student should be able to identify dietary errors and make recommendations for modification. | Change in nutrition knowledge |
The student should be able to consume less food from the top of the pyramid. | Change in behaviour in relation to the consumption of unhealthy foods |
The student should be able to explain what celiac disease is. | Change in Celiac Disease knowledge |
The student is able to assess the impact of their own actions on others. | Change in intentional behaviour related to the social inclusion of people with celiac condition: perception of the influence of one’s own actions on others. |
The student should be able to analyse gluten | Change in knowledge regarding gluten and its presence in foods |
The student should be able to classify food groups according to gluten content. | Change in knowledge regarding gluten and its presence in foods |
The student should be able to understand the work of scientists, to know that the gluten content of foods is analysed through experimentation. | Change in attitude in relation to interest in science |
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© 2024 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 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
Share and Cite
Vázquez-Polo, M.; Churruca, I.; Perez-Junkera, G.; Larretxi, I.; Lasa, A.; Esparta, J.; Cantero-Ruiz de Eguino, L.; Navarro, V. Study Protocol for a Controlled Trial of Nutrition Education Intervention about Celiac Disease in Primary School: ZELIAKIDE Project. Nutrients 2024, 16, 338. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu16030338
Vázquez-Polo M, Churruca I, Perez-Junkera G, Larretxi I, Lasa A, Esparta J, Cantero-Ruiz de Eguino L, Navarro V. Study Protocol for a Controlled Trial of Nutrition Education Intervention about Celiac Disease in Primary School: ZELIAKIDE Project. Nutrients. 2024; 16(3):338. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu16030338
Chicago/Turabian StyleVázquez-Polo, Maialen, Itziar Churruca, Gesala Perez-Junkera, Idoia Larretxi, Arrate Lasa, Jon Esparta, Leire Cantero-Ruiz de Eguino, and Virginia Navarro. 2024. "Study Protocol for a Controlled Trial of Nutrition Education Intervention about Celiac Disease in Primary School: ZELIAKIDE Project" Nutrients 16, no. 3: 338. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu16030338
APA StyleVázquez-Polo, M., Churruca, I., Perez-Junkera, G., Larretxi, I., Lasa, A., Esparta, J., Cantero-Ruiz de Eguino, L., & Navarro, V. (2024). Study Protocol for a Controlled Trial of Nutrition Education Intervention about Celiac Disease in Primary School: ZELIAKIDE Project. Nutrients, 16(3), 338. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu16030338