Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
362018 Journal of Nutrition Education and Behavior 2013 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

ObjectiveTo develop a Web-based tool (PortionSize@warenessTool) and to evaluate its effectiveness in increasing awareness of reference serving sizes and factors that may contribute to overeating in response to large portion sizes.MethodsA randomized, controlled trial (intervention, n = 167; control, n = 143) was conducted. The authors measured awareness of reference serving size and overeating triggers from larger portions by an online questionnaire, assessed at baseline and 1 week later. Exposure dose reflected online activity (eg, number of Web pages viewed). Process evaluation data were collected within the intervention group.ResultsThe intervention group demonstrated significantly higher awareness of reference serving sizes (η2 = .062; P < .001) and overeating triggers from larger portions (η2 = .061; P < .001) at posttest. Also, the authors observed a dose-dependent effect that led to improved awareness.Conclusions and ImplicationsThe PortionSize@warenessTool constitutes a promising tool to improve portion size awareness.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences Food Science
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