An Exploration of Nutritional Education within the Holiday Activities and Food Programme in England
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Study Design
2.2. Participants
2.3. Procedure
2.4. Procedure for Analysis
3. Findings
3.1. Theme 1: The Aims and Objectives of HAF Nutritional Education
3.1.1. Providing Access to Nutritional Education that Equips Families with Food-Related Skills and Knowledge and Promotes Independence
“We’re also trying to educate children and their wider family that actually, nutrition can be obtained in all sorts of different ways, it doesn’t have to always be through yakky things that they perhaps don’t like, like veg. Erm, that a balanced diet doesn’t have to cost the earth, and it can be accessible locally, and to be able to plan, purchase or obtain and prepare a healthy meal doesn’t necessarily have to cost the earth, and can be done within a budget and also with limited equipment. So, it’s important that we teach kids all of that stuff, but actually we are trying to sort of, teach their mums and dads as well. So that’s what we are trying to achieve out of the programme.”(P2)
“So we did oven baked chicken nuggets and homemade burgers and chopped up tortillas to make your own nacho chips and stuff that were all oven baked, and people just loved it! The day was great fun making it all.”(P8)
“So, how much it costs to buy a bag of carrots, you know, where to get carrots from. Erm, the fact that a bag of carrots might do two of the five meals. So actually, the financial cost of the meal is, I don’t know, five quid or whatever it comes out at, which… I mean what we are trying to do is persuade people that actually, that is far cheaper than buying three pizzas.”(P2)
“I don’t think it’s our place to do that. I’ve worked on the front line with communities and families who are low-income for almost my entire career, and the best budgeters I’ve ever met have been in those communities, and I don’t think the problem is budgeting, I think the problem is not having access to enough funds to buy good quality food.”(P1)
“It’s a really delicate subject because it starts to challenge…you’re in a realm of conversation that can create quite a bit of stigma and worry about people and money’s always a different conversation for lots of people and certainly for those with no money, it becomes an even more difficult conversation about what you’re going to do…for me, it’s whether the word budget is the wrong word.”(P8)
3.1.2. Signposting to Relevant Support in the Community
“There’s a map to all of the food aid providers in the city, and then there’s also signposting to the other services. So, if it’s additional food-related support you need, or if it’s about help with your fuel and utility bills or low-income extras—all of which impacts on their food budget which then impacts on their ability to eat nutritiously. Housing benefits, employment, refugees and asylum seekers, all of that, and then links to the contact information for the organisations that can help you with that.”(P7)
3.2. Theme 2: The Modes of Delivery Used for HAF Nutritional Education
3.2.1. Face-to-Face
“We have people like the allotment association, and they teach about growing things from seeds and the children were able to, to plant seeds which they take home and grow.”(P3)
“We also did tasting sessions, so we got children and families to try food that they wouldn’t have tried before—and the feedback from families was really surprising, such as ‘well they won’t eat that at home’, but because they prepared food and were trying it with other people, that meant that they would try it out. So, we made sure that was in there!”(P3)
“But at the start of the day, some of the raw ingredients were out on a table, and it was called ‘smellevision’, and the kids were just invited to come over and smell the food. They weren’t asked if they liked it or not, it was just to smell the food and smell the raw ingredients, and research shows if kids engage with the smells of raw ingredients they are far more likely to try and test different foods…it was a creative, fun, familiar but trying new things, approach to this group.”(P6)
“… when they did snack time the kids got to chop up loads of fruit that they’d never had before, and they got to go along and try all the different fruit and chop it up and know what it is and name it and smell it and it was for familiarity with new fruits, veg and stuff like that.”(P8)
“we actually found that people wanted to meet face-to-face. We were very careful, kept people in family bubbles, but still managed to do the face-to-face.”(P3)
3.2.2. Take-Home
“So we would give out any food that was left over at the end of the day and would go home with parents, so they could take it home and have it later on in the day. Everybody did a make, take and bake activity, so we knew again there was food going home. Every weekend we would give people weekend bags, which was enough food for two main meals over the weekend, so that again, we knew they were eating over the weekend. But it was about giving them the choices, giving them recipes, showing how easy it is, how you can adapt things using very few ingredients and get something that your child will eat that is nutritious.”(P3)
“They have been designed to be able to be carried by a child, so they are 30×20 cm2 and weighed no more than 2 kg, so can be carried by a young person or put in a backpack.”(P1)
“So, when you open up our boxes, all of the ingredients are wrapped up in craft paper, and there is also a sticker on the box which explains what is in there and its shelf life, so when families open it we want children to feel like they are opening a present.”(P1)
“They will take the take and make recipe boxhome, and when they open it they will find all the portioned ingredients to make that dish, and a recipe card—and there is also a link on the recipe card for an online tutorial video as well, and that meal can be prepared in approximately one hour with step by step instructions.”(P1)
3.2.3. Online
“We have tutorial videos on YouTube and there’s a QR code on the recipe card to support families to link to those videos.”(P1)
“So children are collecting points for their nutrition and their activity, and then that gives them healthy hero points. So they level up to become a healthy hero, and it takes five different stages. So that is all about the big objective that they’re trying to reach. Along the whole way, they’ve got different missions that they can complete for more points, and these missions are where we then teach children about healthy living, the unhealthy habits, but they’re personified, so you might go up against the fizzy witches, and they create all these potions and powders that are affecting the townspeople, but that’s more like, in a real world, soda cans and a sugar rush. So the children learn about the effects of what the fizzy witches are doing as well as what sugar, or too much sugar, can do for your body at the same time.”(P4)
“The biggest disadvantage that we have that we’re digital, is that you can’t really taste the numbers on the computer…but the advantage is when it comes to certain foods that they would never have seen or heard about, we can bring them to the screen. And it’s all about then saying, okay maybe we won’t be able to peel a certain vegetable or fruit that we mentioned, but you’ll know that it’s meant to be peeled, so you select peeling instead of selecting chopping. So you understand, you know, onions are chopped. And you get more about the knowledge, and then when it comes to it, whenever you have the chance, you’ll be one step ahead.”(P4)
3.3. Theme 3: Facilitators and Barriers to the Planning, Implementation and Delivery of HAF Nutritional Education
3.3.1. Whole-Family Approach
“We know from research that families and children who are quite young are still aware of the food security position of their household and if they’re eating food on site at a club, but then coming home and their family are not consuming healthy and nutritious meals regularly, that still causes a lot of stress and anxiety for the young person. So in order to support families appropriately, to support children appropriately, there has to be a whole-family approach in there.”(P1)
“But ultimately, is it sinking in with whole families? Because you’ve got to get a message to the parents as well. The kids can have that, but moment they then go home and then they’re getting, you know, chicken nuggets and chips because that’s what they can get from the freezer shop. Yes they’re being fed, but that’s the challenge, that’s the ultimate challenge in this as well.”(P8)
“So the parents coaches and teachers… the children are called [Name], and then we’ve got the [Name] Academy where they all learn. And the parents, coaches and teachers, they take the role of mentors, and they are there guiding them along the whole way.”(P4)
“…the children will go off with the play workers and the parents will have a cup of coffee, and we’ll sit and talk to them about some of the issues that’s affected them. So, there is a separate session just for parents this time, because especially over the Christmas break, we feel that they need that extra support and we can give them one to one support.”(P3)
“It’s about actually getting them to enjoy the process of cooking and seeing it as a fun activity, rather than thinking ‘ugh I’ve got to make something, I’ve got to follow a recipe, it’s not going to work, I’m a rubbish cook’. Because that’s the feedback you get from them when they’re telling you about their cooking at home. A lot of families are really, especially mums, feel really like ‘my food is awful, they won’t eat it’ so it’s that positive reinforcement that food is actually an enjoyable thing to do together. Also encouraging an element of playfulness with food, where you feel relaxed and you feel like it’s something that is something you’d like to do again, rather than a punishment.”(P5)
3.3.2. Facilities at Venues and at Home
“… so you know they will be explaining, sort of, why it’s important to drink lots of fluid and not to have sugar and sugary drinks and all of that sort of stuff.”(P2)
“We have provision in really small indoor spaces that haven’t got the amenities to be able to do things like the daily cooking and various bits and pieces. So with that continuing, I don’t think you’re ever going to get the consistency around the food prep…”(P9)
“Because it was all outside and it was quite temporary where they would put it up for the day and take it down again, we weren’t able to use electricity really or induction hobs or anything like that. And I think the next step is cooking… cooking with actual cooking facilities.”(P5)
“I know the case for last year was that hot food was very much a lower priority because you were eating outdoors. What I would hope is as we start to come out of COVID in future years, is that we can start putting more of a focus on the whole hot meals again.”(P7)
“Schools weren’t particularly welcoming letting groups in to use their food tech rooms because they’re closed over the summer, so they didn’t want to open. So I think there’s some work that nationally could be done with that, actually getting schools to be more involved and say look we’ve got facilities, you’ve all got food hygiene certificates and training, come and use our kitchens—because that’s what we need, we need well kitted out indoor spaces where you can cook with ten people at once… not just one hob or a load of hobs, with an electrical system that doesn’t really work.”(P5)
“And the other thing we did is, we gave out slow cookers as well, because, especially for cheap cuts of meat, or even for vegetables, putting stuff in the slow cooker first thing in the morning… you haven’t got to think about it all day, you can go out and do all your things and then that meal is ready at night. And that was one of the things that people were saying ‘I haven’t got time to do that sort of cooking’. So it’s about quick cooking, but also the slow cooker that would enable people to fit it around their lives and still feed their children good meals.”(P3)
“If you’re talking to a family where you’ve got lots of families who are living in, I don’t know, rented accommodation where they’ve all got access to one tiny kitchen with really limited kitchen cooking facilities, what’s your provision and therefore your education going to look like that’s actually going to mean anything to them? You could be presenting and providing the most useful provision with fantastic education stuff but if those families can’t actually implement that, what is the point?”(P7)
3.3.3. Accessibility and Inclusivity
“The HAF coordinator was so excited that they were doing a partnership arrangement with a supermarket, and the supermarket was providing fresh fruits and vegetables and they were encouraged to provide more exotic fruits, so the source of fruits that these kids would be seeing everyday. And on the one hand I was thinking ‘that’s fantastic it’s going to enlarge their experience and their palates and they will find all sorts of wonderful tastes’ but on the other hand I’m thinking about some really deprived communities that we’re supporting where the thought of your child coming home and saying ‘oh mum I really want more strawberries’ and you know if you can’t afford that, then that is a really horrible position to put a parent in. So I think there is something about poverty proofing that nutritional education that is really, really important.”(P7)
“One of the biggest challenges was that we found the digital literacy of the parents is going to be sometimes a lot lower than their children, because the kids are more tech savvy.”(P4)
“There’s quite an important reason behind that which is digital exclusion. We’re concerned that if we deliver online, then the people who need that information most are excluded from receiving it.”(P7)
“Particularly in rural areas, we’ve got homes here who are off the grid. You know they’re not connected to mains electricity. They’re not connected to gas, they’ve got a generator, a diesel generator that gives them 8 h of power. So charging a device to be able to connect is just at the bottom of the list of priorities, whereas if they can travel and get to a camp that’s very different.”(P11)
“I think there’s something that isn’t taught to the Local Authorities and providers that would be a benefit, which is that they need to understand what the limitations and restrictions are that are facing the families that they are providing HAF to. By which I mean, if you’ve got an area where the majority of families’ literacy and numeracy are so poor that they’re not going to be able to follow a recipe card, then what is the point?”(P7)
3.3.4. Guidelines, Preferences, and Quality Assurance
“We did try to design the boxes and the recipes to have as few allergens as possible in the boxes and to also be suitable for as many different families as possible, so taking into account different preferences, so we wanted to widen access in that way. We also wanted the boxes to be environmentally more sustainable, and so looking at some of the recipes comparatively, that we serve in comparison to some meat-based recipes, you can see that there is a huge carbon saving by supplying vegetarian meals over meat-based meals. And also, we want our boxes to be very healthy, to meet School Food Standards, and to support children with creating and producing high quality, high nutritious value meals in their home, and we felt that was best done through vegetarian food that was based on pulses, and fresh fruits and vegetables.”(P1)
“So as part of the grant agreement, the Food Standards are linked in there and they’re signed up to having to follow the School Food Standards as part of that.”(P7)
“We did lots of mandatory training around, kind of, food hygiene and achieving School Food Standards, menu development and allergy awareness, etc. So almost kind of the compliance end of the spectrum on the food side was where we spent quite a lot of our energy.”(P9)
“But at the clubs where they either prepare or consume food on site, one of the things that we put in place this year was spot checks through our school meals team, to actually go in and look at the type of food that was being offered, the standard and value of that food, and to make sure that there was some educational support that was associated with it.”(P2)
“The guidelines that we follow are health and safety. So clearly, the pantries are registered with environmental health, and the food that we give out is part of that. So, we would only give out food that’s fresh, and we link with our food banks as well so that we make sure that bags that we are giving out are covered by that.”(P3)
“In terms of guidelines for the home element, in terms of what should be taught, not really... it’s more of a case of looking at what’s on the market, you know, things like what’s ‘Change4Life’ doing, and if ‘Change4Life’ is coming off from the NHS and public health, then surely they’ve done enough research into why they’ve taught these subjects. So that formed the basis there, and then it came to looking at the school national curriculum.”(P4)
“No, it says in the guidance it’s to provide enriching activities to help with skills and confidence and things like that, and we want to provide nutritional education to help families understand more about eating healthily, cooking on a budget, etc. It’s something around those lines, so there’s no actual guidance.”(P8)
“I guess it’s what you class as nutritional education, because some of them will be running nutritional education by stealth. So, for some of these groups it will be a really big win if these kids aren’t eating chicken and chips seven days a week, and that they are now eating some pasta with a bit of vegetables in it, or a sandwich and some carrots and apples and grapes as well. You know, that is a huge win for some of these groups. So, it really depends on what you class as nutritional education. If you’re talking about formal education, I would say not all of them do it because loads of them will be building it into their activities, because otherwise why would their children and their parents choose to come along to that? It won’t happen.”(P7)
“We don’t just let them do it. So, somebody goes in on a regular basis. There’s a coordinator for each of the areas, and they go in and they report back and send photos on what’s happening. So, it’s a monitoring system…”(P3)
“I think it’s been well recognised from the outset, I think from an operational delivery point of view, it’s been something that if I’m really honest, we’ve been conscious of, but its probably took us some time to really get our heads around in terms of how you deliver a really great programme.”(P2)
“I think we can be really honest now in our reflection of the nutritional education side of the programme, that it was quite weak because we didn’t put emphasis on it. I think we have to be really honest and not challenging our providers too much because we didn’t put the emphasis on that as an outcome that we were looking for them to achieve. I think probably even when we consider the guidance document that was shared with providers ahead of HAF grant applications, there wasn’t a huge focus on nutritional education and associated outcomes. It was very much around the School Food Standards side of the programme.”(P9)
3.4. Theme 4: The Perceived Impacts of HAF Nutritional Education
3.4.1. Improved Cooking Confidence and Competence
“They were more relaxed I think and more relaxed around lunch time and more confident after the sessions, you know…”(P6)
“Some of this was about cooking with confidence, so a lot of the families that didn’t have the confidence to cook or to step outside of their usual group of meals that they would cook. So it was about providing them with the recipe cards and all of the resources that would enable them to try and cook those things, but encouraging them to do that, if time allowed, as a family, so it became a family activity.”(P7)
“But having the parents and sometimes the grandparents there, was key—because if kids come home with a bag of food, parents will say, well if they’re not used to cooking from scratch, they’ll say ‘what am I going to do with that?’. But instead, in this case, at lunchtime they had this delicious meal and I was showing them how to make it, so it was less foreign.”(P6)
3.4.2. Enhanced Willingness to Try New Foods
“I know from my experiences of working with families for many years who are at risk of, or in food insecurity, that sometimes in those households parents don’t feel confident having their children in the kitchen because of the risk of spoilage, waste, all sorts of issues related basically to the loss of money. And so as cooking is deemed a fairly high risk activity, it can be those children from families who are in food insecurity who miss out on that. So this offers the families, and the children, an opportunity to do that together risk-free, or risk-free in a monetary sense, and it also offers those families who, again may not have very much money to buy new foods and try it, again that offers no risks through wastage and spoilage, and it gives them an opportunity to try recipes and try new foods that they wouldn’t have otherwise, risk-free from a monetary perspective.”(P1)
“So at home, if you are living with food insecurity and you don’t have disposable income to spare, you’re not likely to go out and buy a load of random ingredients you haven’t had before, just in case the child doesn’t like it or it gets wasted. So we try to make our sessions as open as possible, so that they can have that experience. So in term-time that’s in nurseries, but during the HAF it was during the food sessions.”(P5)
“They would eat with their peers, they would see what their peers were eating and you could provide more positive reinforcement to them to be eating healthy meals and trying things that they haven’t tried before, and changing their eating habits. And we would always have parents and carers saying ‘Oh I’ve tried to get them to eat this stuff at home they won’t, it’s great now they’re coming home asking for it’ so that’s always great to hear.”(P7)
3.4.3. Better Understanding of Sustainability, Environmental Impacts, and Food Provenance
“We also have a number of community organisations, more each year, that are actually growing foods and then the children are involved in growing that food, harvesting that food, preparing that food and then eating that food. And again, I think that’s a really important way, particularly in terms of fresh fruit and vegetables, of getting children and young people really engaged and interested in eating fresh fruit and vegetables that they ordinarily wouldn’t eat.”(P7)
“So, the reason that we include environmental information on the cards is because we want to give young people and their families an opportunity to contextualise the food that they are eating, and indeed any food that they are eating, and we think it’s a really good opportunity to support young people to understand a little bit more about the links between food and the environment.”(P1)
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Theme | Sub-Themes |
---|---|
The aims and objectives of HAF nutritional education | Providing nutritional education that equips families with food-related skills and knowledge and promotes independence; signposting to relevant support in the community. |
The modes of delivery used for HAF nutritional education | Face-to-face; take-home; online. |
Facilitators and barriers to the planning, implementation, and delivery of HAF nutritional education | Whole-family approach; facilities at venues and at home; accessibility and inclusivity; guidelines, preferences and quality assurance. |
The perceived impacts of HAF nutritional education | Improved cooking confidence and competence; enhanced willingness to try new foods; better understanding of sustainability, environmental impacts and food provenance. |
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Round, E.K.; Shinwell, J.; Stretesky, P.B.; Defeyter, M.A. An Exploration of Nutritional Education within the Holiday Activities and Food Programme in England. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2022, 19, 2398. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19042398
Round EK, Shinwell J, Stretesky PB, Defeyter MA. An Exploration of Nutritional Education within the Holiday Activities and Food Programme in England. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2022; 19(4):2398. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19042398
Chicago/Turabian StyleRound, Emily K., Jackie Shinwell, Paul B. Stretesky, and Margaret Anne Defeyter. 2022. "An Exploration of Nutritional Education within the Holiday Activities and Food Programme in England" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 19, no. 4: 2398. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19042398
APA StyleRound, E. K., Shinwell, J., Stretesky, P. B., & Defeyter, M. A. (2022). An Exploration of Nutritional Education within the Holiday Activities and Food Programme in England. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 19(4), 2398. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19042398