1. Introduction
Native Americans are disproportionately affected by many diet-related chronic health problems, including diabetes and obesity [
1]. According to the Centers for Disease Control (CDC), Native American adults have the highest rates of diabetes compared to any other race or ethnicity [
2]. Many factors may contribute to worsening health conditions. The CDC explains that social determinants of health, including access to and availability of food options, are major predictors of health outcomes [
3]. The inability to achieve optimal health within and beyond Native communities has been largely attributed to insufficient access to places that sell healthy, affordable foods, and this is particularly burdensome to low-income communities. Coupled with high rates of poverty and unemployment prevalent in reservation communities, these populations may be at an increased risk of food insecurity, where households are unable to acquire enough food for their families to lead an “active, healthy life” [
4]. Limited research exists that examines the levels of food insecurity among Native Americans, yet at least one study finds that food insecurity is higher among Native Americans compared to non-Natives [
5].
Before settler contact, Native Americans, especially in desert cultures, relied on a balance of animal- and plant-based foods sourced from hunting and gathering to meet their dietary needs. Arid plants were high in fiber and contained hypoglycemic compounds that, combined with regular physical activity, resulted in higher metabolic efficiency and limited insulin secretion for most Native Americans [
6]. Following the displacement of Native people from their lands and relocation to geographically isolated reservations, the US government established food annuities, and today the Food Distribution Program on Indian Reservations (FDPIR) has become an essential component of household food security [
7,
8]. However, these boxes have been found to be nutritionally inferior and not culturally appropriate [
9], as they exclude traditional foods that their ancestors had before settlers arrived in America. Instead, the composition of foods is calorie-dense and high in fats and sugars. Some claim that, over time, the exposure to commodity foods has not only contributed to the deterioration of the knowledge of the traditional Native American diet, but has also coincided with increased rates of degenerative diseases that were historically low among Indigenous populations [
10].
Tribal communities have taken steps to address mounting health concerns with an emphasis on cultural suitability through the development of health and wellness programs. For example, the Stanford Chronic Disease Self-Management Program was intended to address diabetes within urban Native communities in Santa Clara Valley, California [
11]. The program had the highest retention rate of any class offered at the Indian Health Center, in addition to increasing fitness center usage by 34% [
11]. Another wellness program in Alaska took these efforts further by using a community-based approach to incorporate Yup’ik values into the curriculum [
12]. Along these lines, there is an ongoing desire for nutrition education that teaches basic cooking skills and incorporates culturally sensitive elements into food preparation as a means to drive improvements in food choices [
13]. To our knowledge, no study has specifically examined Indigenous-based nutrition education programs.
For this study, we collaborated with an Indigenous-led nonprofit and examined a series of nutrition education programs designed to empower community members to make healthier food choices and to develop a deeper awareness of their communities’ cultures and traditions. We were interested in evaluating whether a theoretically sound educational framework, namely Bloom’s Taxonomy [
14], when applied to an Indigenous nutrition education programming, would be perceived positively by participants. Thus, the aim of this study was to explore the use of Bloom’s Taxonomy as a framework underpinning Indigenous nutrition education programs and to identify key outcomes from participation in such programs. We found that designing a curriculum with objectives characterized according to Bloom’s Taxonomy appeared to improve overall participant satisfaction and retention of information—two outcomes that are linked with behavioral change and improved health outcomes [
15,
16,
17]. Of the programs we examined in this study, a “train-the-trainer” (T3) program had the most favorable results as determined by participants’ program sentiments. This also supports the rationale for using Bloom’s Taxonomy as a framework for designing program curricula, since a T3 program utilized learning objectives from all tiers which build higher-order thinking skills and the development of self-efficacy.
2. Application of Bloom’s Taxonomy to Nutrition Education Programs
Although many barriers and accompanying interventions exist that contribute to achieving optimal health, in this study, we focused on barriers experienced at the individual level, such as lack of knowledge, weak motivation, and misperceptions about what constitutes a nutritionally sound, ancestral diet. Furthermore, we considered providing information as the primary mechanism to overcome individual-level barriers and incite changes in individuals’ behavior.
To facilitate the discussion, we bring the reader’s attention to the theory of change framework, summarized in
Figure 1. When barriers to accessing healthy foods are attributed to lack of knowledge, providing information is one intervention that can allow for improved food choices [
18]. This relationship is represented in the top panel of
Figure 1. Information as an intervention tool is empowering, because it preserves a participant’s ability to make a choice after receiving the information from that intervention, whereas other interventions may inadvertently result in participants becoming dependent on the program in the long term. Examples of this can be seen in food bank utilization rates or long-term use of other temporary assistance programs [
19,
20]. Information-based programs can also be more cost-effective compared to other types of programs [
21,
22]. One study found that an increase in health literacy contributed to an increase in diabetes knowledge and self-management behavior, in which participants were more likely to self-monitor and adjust their behavior to manage their symptoms [
23]. Although studies have found success in using information as a strategy to overcome barriers that inhibit improved food choices, information alone is more often ineffective when used as an intervention tool. The ineffectiveness of information-based campaigns on overall behavioral change has been shown in studies on substance abuse prevention interventions, where attitudes on substance abuse became more negative, but abusing behavior either did not change or increased [
24]. In a study examining the most commonly consumed foods among Native American women in Oklahoma, Taylor et al. [
25] found that providing information on fat content had little effect on the consumption of fried potatoes and fried chicken, which was slightly correlated with an increase in consumption of these foods. The perception that food was healthier (lower in fat or sugar) did not influence consumption behavior. Another example is seen in the usage of nutrition labels on packaged foods, where about two-thirds of college students and young adults utilize the information “sometimes,” “rarely,” or “never” [
26]. Providing information can also lead to a perception of more options to choose from, which can be overwhelming and discourage consumers from making the desired choice due to trade-offs from equally but uniquely beneficial options [
27]. From these studies, we gather that information alone as an intervention mechanism, while providing short-term relief, is constrained to addressing symptoms of underlying problems, and thus behavior change cannot be reliably achieved.
The literature examining the effectiveness of information-based programs as strategies to improve food choices generally fails to consider the extent to which participants are actively engaging with the material and utilizing higher-order thinking. The increased retention of information that leads to actual behavioral change is primarily through self-efficacy. Self-efficacy, or an individual’s perception of their capability to perform certain actions, has been linked to self-regulated behavioral change in the domains of physical exercise, nutrition and weight control, and addictive behaviors [
28]. Programs that include self-efficacy as a primary goal may be more likely to have success in changing individual behavior [
15]. There is also research that suggests that utilizing higher-order thinking skills is linked to self-efficacy [
16,
17]. As opposed to simple memorization and understanding of basic facts, higher-order thinking, i.e., the ability to analyze and apply information, has been linked to retention of learned information and a more positive educational experience [
29]. Therefore, for programs attempting to change behavior through informational learning, curriculum design as a tool to foster higher-order thinking skills is a central link between information and behavior change. Together, these intermediary connections represent the importance of curriculum development in information utilization, an assumption that is often missing from many information-based interventions. This relationship is presented in the bottom panel of
Figure 1.
The theory of change framework described here contributes to the development of sustainable nutrition education programs in that it can optimize the intended impact on participants by influencing the extent to which participants retain, integrate, and apply concepts, while simultaneously making better use of available resources. We posit that developing a nutrition education program using Bloom’s Taxonomy provides a framework for coordinators to ensure that program goals are met with a higher likelihood of adoption. The result is that information is better dispersed to participants, who can use program resources to generate the knowledge and skills they need to change their behavior.
Bloom’s Taxonomy is a canonical educational model that is used during curriculum design to scaffold learning outcomes and is the learning framework we applied in this study. It has been used primarily in curriculum development and analysis in school settings but has applications in a variety of settings [
30,
31,
32]. In this study, we used a condensed model of Bloom’s Taxonomy, which categorizes cognitive domains into three tiers (see
Figure 2).
Tier One, the least complex level, correlates to the cognitive domains of knowledge and comprehension, where the main focus is on learning new terms and subject matter in addition to understanding these ideas in different contexts [
14]. Tier One corresponds to initial exposure to program topics and concepts, where the learning objective for participants would be to learn something new and not necessarily return home having learned a new skill. Tier Two represents the cognitive domains of application and analysis and builds upon Tier One by requiring participants to take the existing subject matter and apply it to current and real-world situations, as well as identify implications that might arise when a new action or variable is introduced [
14]. Tier Two incorporates an interdisciplinary approach by connecting program topics to different industries, settings, and places in time, where subject matter takes on a new meaning with a changing environment. Tier Three, the most complex level, encompasses the cognitive domains of synthesis and evaluation and represents the pinnacle of educational acumen, where participants take all previously attained knowledge and apply it in a way that demonstrates mastery of the material and an ability to build off of it in a meaningful way [
14]. In a program that aims to change the behavior of participants, being able to synthesize and evaluate new information creates self-sufficiency that truly validates whether the program has the capacity to make a significant impact on learning outcomes.
Multiple clinical education studies to develop assessments based on Bloom’s Taxonomy have shown that learning at the comprehension level, or “remember and understand” tier of Bloom’s Taxonomy framework in
Figure 2, is a predictor of how students will perform at higher cognitive levels. These studies have shown that students were much more likely to answer knowledge and comprehension questions correctly compared to analysis and application questions depending on their performance [
33,
34,
35]. These results indicate that the cumulative nature of learning has a generally positive effect on information retention. The extent to which program curriculum development influences the retention of information in participants outside of academic settings has not been thoroughly investigated. The cases in which Bloom’s Taxonomy has been used most similarly to that of this study are in improving evaluation in extension services [
36] and in measuring the impact of garden programs in schools [
37]. In both cases, the outcomes of interest are more hands-on in nature and focus on information that is tied to the development of specific skills, such as improving crop yields.
3. Material and Methods
3.1. Nutrition Education Programs
As previously mentioned, we focused on three distinct Native-serving programs, whose curricula were designed by the Indigenous-led nonprofit Partnership with Native Americans (PWNA) [
38]. PWNA programs provide relief and resources for a variety of quality-of-life issues for Native Americans, such as K–12 education, access to healthy food and clean water, emergency services for rural and remote tribal communities, and long-term capacity building. PWNA programs provide the ideal portfolio of nutrition education offerings to apply the Bloom’s Taxonomy framework, as each of the three programs used to engage participants and convey program concepts access the distinct cognitive domains and learning strategies. We examined these three programs, each of which provides information in ways that correspond to different tiers of Bloom’s Taxonomy.
Bloom’s Taxonomy was used in the context of this study because PWNA’s programs aim to use information as a mechanism for behavioral change in a small classroom setting, even though the classroom is not based in academia. Because the programs deal with different levels of cognitive engagement, Bloom’s Taxonomy is suitable as a tool to examine the curriculum of each program. The overall goal is that, by using Bloom’s Taxonomy to design curriculum that engages participants in higher-order levels of thinking, the likelihood of behavioral change will be much higher [
16,
17,
28]. Just as Bloom’s Taxonomy was developed to categorize educational goals, the nutrition education programs offered through PWNA work in a similar manner. Each of the programs offers a distinct curriculum and, just as in developing a teaching module, each focuses on defining a clear set of objectives for the learner (in this case, the participant). To correlate the condensed Bloom’s Taxonomy model (
Figure 2) with its application to the Indigenous nutrition education programs reviewed in this study, we have summarized the learning objectives of each program and their corresponding tiers in
Table 1.
3.1.1. Tier One: Remember and Understand
The Native Youth Food Sovereignty Summit (NYFSS) served to expose youth to food sovereignty concepts and information about healthy food. The three-day event in Rapid City, South Dakota, taught youth how to read nutrition labels, determine appropriate serving sizes, and forage for common traditional herbs, as well as understand the meaning of traditional stories as they relate to nutrition and food sovereignty. This program is considered the first tier because it is the initial delivery of the information without any requirement of the youth to apply their new knowledge. Some activity-based learning was programmed to keep the attention of the youth and help them learn new concepts more than it was to ensure that they learned new skills. A total of 21 youth participated in this event, with representation from five tribes in South Dakota (Cheyenne River, Rosebud, Oglala, Eagle Butte, and Wounded Knee).
3.1.2. Tier Two: Apply and Analyze
The STRIVE (Seek-Teach-Reclaim-Indigenous-Venture-Endure) forum event brought together community and industry leaders to discuss success, challenges, and opportunities relating to Indigenous food security and food sovereignty. Over two days, representatives from tribal communities and the Arizona Department of Agriculture were invited to speak about funding and networking resources, traditional foods and recipes, and emerging policies impacting Indigenous health in the Southwest. The STRIVE forum is considered a second-tier event, because it provides context to existing knowledge that participants have, provides them with information about how they can enhance what they already know, and presents opportunities for further engagement. Many participants have experience in related fields, so the STRIVE forum aims to provide structured information on relevant current events and teaches them new concepts that lead to improvements in nutritional and food-related outcomes within their communities. A total of 45 community representatives were present, with representation from 15 tribes.
3.1.3. Tier Three: Create and Evaluate
PWNA’s T3 program recruited community leaders from over 10 tribes on reservations across five states (Arizona, Colorado, Montana, South Dakota, Utah) to learn how to prepare and cook healthy foods, with an emphasis on traditional foods and cooking methods. The T3 program duration is one to three days, with multiple sessions held in different tribal communities. After program completion, T3 graduates are expected to demonstrate their mastery of cooking skills by preparing and serving a community meal, in addition to teaching a new wave of community members the cooking skills in their respective professions or within their families. In 2018, T3 graduates fed 936 tribal members during these community meals. The T3 program is a third-tier program, because it requires participants to learn nutritional information, practice cooking skills, and demonstrate their proficiency in those skills by serving a community meal. It is anticipated that the higher the cognitive demands, the more effective the information will be in educating participants and influencing a change of behavior, thus contributing to improvements in health outcomes.
3.2. Participants
Participants in PWNA’s programs are Native American and primarily living on reservations within the organization’s service area, which consists of nine states in the Midwest and Southwest United States. With few exceptions, participants opt in voluntarily and are not selected using any specific criteria. Youth participating in the NYFSS were recruited in groups by community members with whom they had a mutual connection, but eligibility to the program was open to all Native youth, and program advertising was widespread. For the STRIVE forum, community and industry leaders from PWNA’s professional network were contacted to participate. T3 program participants have varied roles in the community and are either the main food purchaser and preparer for their family or work in foodservice, such as a school or senior center cafeteria, bar, or restaurant.
3.3. Measures
It is difficult to measure direct indicators of learning that will result in behavioral change, so another learning factor that is relevant to this study is participant satisfaction. In online settings, student satisfaction had a significant influence on retention, perceived usefulness of the course, and course interaction [
39,
40]. In employment-related training, program satisfaction was linked to perceived learning and learning transfer of the material to the workplace [
41]. Another study examining learning in university courses also found that student satisfaction factors were closely associated with perceived learning [
42]. In this study, participant satisfaction with program content was used as a proxy for learning retention due to their close association and the volume of satisfaction data collected during the programs. Satisfaction measurements were readily available compared to more in-depth, long-term investigations on participant learning. Because of the evidence of satisfaction and positive behavioral changes, in our study, we relied on data collected from post-event evaluation questionnaires that measure participant satisfaction, the outcome variable in our empirical analysis, and three separate indices determined by program design parameters that we use as predictors of program satisfaction.
3.4. Data
For each program, five forms of primary data were collected. These are categorized as follows: (1) pre-event surveys, (2) post-event surveys, (3) post-event evaluation questionnaires, (4) a follow-up survey, and (5) detailed field notes recorded from direct observation. Each form of data collected is summarized by program type in
Table 2.
At the NYFSS, both pre-event and post-event surveys (N = 18; N = 21) were collected from youth participants, as well as field notes. A consent form was signed by a parent or legal guardian indicating their permission that their child could take part in the surveys. In addition, youth were informed about the purpose of the survey and an assent form was signed by the youth before participating in both the pre- and post-event surveys. The NYFSS surveys were developed with influence from the food sovereignty assessment tool used by the First Nations Development Institute [
43] to measure the youths’ understanding of traditional and ancestral foods, as well as their understanding of food sovereignty.
Post-event evaluation questionnaires were administered by PWNA and given to participants at the STRIVE forum and T3 programs. The purpose of the questionnaires was to measure participant satisfaction with the program and solicit feedback on program components. The post-event evaluation questionnaire for the STRIVE forum consisted of twelve questions: eight questions measured on a five-point Likert scale and four open-ended questions. The Likert-scale questions asked participants to indicate their level of agreement regarding program content (two questions), instruction (three questions), adequacy of the facilities (two questions), and satisfaction (one question). For the T3 program, the questionnaire consisted of fourteen questions: twelve questions were nearly identical to the STRIVE post-evaluation questionnaire, but also contained two additional questions on training objectives and materials provided. In addition, a follow-up survey was sent out some time after the T3 program completion, asking five additional questions to determine if graduates utilized the skills they had learned.
In total, 395 individuals participated in either STRIVE or T3 during the period of August 2018 to October 2019. The characteristics of the study sample are presented in
Table 3.
The majority of the participants were female (72.4%). It was not mandatory for participants to fill out the questionnaire, so the number of completed questionnaires varies across program locations. From those who participated, 254 post-event evaluation questionnaires were collected (N = 26 for STRIVE, N = 228 for T3). However, only eight of the 26 sites reported individual-level data. The eight sites with an individual-level questionnaire are locations A, B, C, E, G, H, M, and U in
Table 3; however, sites A, F, and L used different post-event evaluation questionnaires, so we excluded these sites from our analysis. In addition, three of the T3 sites did not use the same post-event evaluation questionnaire, so we excluded the individual results from these sites, leaving 76 usable post-event evaluation questionnaires.
The questions in the evaluation asked respondents to characterize their experience based on how much they agree or disagree with the statements on the questionnaire measured according to a five-point Likert scale, with 1 being the least favorable and 5 being the most favorable (1 = Strongly Disagree; 2 = Disagree; 3 = Neither Agree nor Disagree; 4 = Agree; 5 = Strongly Agree). In general, the questions fall into one of three question types: content, instruction, and adequacy of resources, which are summarized in
Table 4. Each question is turned into a variable that corresponds to the three question-types. Content1 corresponds to the question “The topics covered were relevant”; Content2 corresponds to the question “The content of the sessions was organized and easy to follow.” Instruction1 refers to the question “Participation and interaction were encouraged”; Instruction2 refers to the question “The presenters were very knowledgeable”; and Instruction3 refers to “The presenters were well prepared.” The final subgroup of questions on adequacy of resources generates two variables: Resources1 corresponding to the question “The time allotted for the event was sufficient”; and Resources2 “The meeting room and facilities were adequate and comfortable.” Mean scores for the content, instruction, and adequacy of resources questions were generally high, ranging from 4.54 (Resources1) to 4.78 (Instruction2).
Program satisfaction (Satisfaction) was also measured on a five-point Likert scale, with 1 being the least satisfied and 5 being the most satisfied (1 = Very Poor; 2 = Poor; 3 = Fair; 4 = Good; 5 = Excellent). Because the survey was a paper survey, there was no way to force a response for each question; therefore, we dropped one observation due to missing information for Satisfaction. Based on the responses to the evaluation questionnaires, participants were generally very satisfied with the programs, with an average score of 4.95 out of 5 (N = 75; s.d. = 0.280; min = 3; max = 5).
3.5. Strategy of Data Analysis
As organizations like PWNA continue to make investments in educational programs to enhance nutritional awareness, we seek to understand the relationship between program design components and learning retention. As noted above, it is difficult to measure direct indicators of learning, so instead we focused on another learning factor that is relevant to this study—participant satisfaction. In other words, if the curriculum for nutrition education programs renders higher levels of satisfaction, then we would interpret this relationship as demonstrable evidence that such a design may lead to mastery in the course learning objectives. Subsequently, we seek to elicit insights from the qualitative data on ways in which to improve curriculum design and address other factors that may limit programmatic success.
In this mixed-methods study, two forms of analysis were conducted. First, we examined relevant program parameters (i.e., content, instruction, and adequacy of resources) to rank their relative significance and to describe the interrelation of patterns using a data reduction technique, specifically, Principal Component Analysis (PCA). Principal component scores were then used as independent variables in a multivariate linear regression analysis to measure statistical correlations with satisfaction outcomes.
We coupled the quantitative approach with a qualitative study using SWOT (Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities, Threats) analysis, described in detail below. We applied the SWOT procedure to assess the program’s capacity to enhance learning retention, i.e., to assess the salience of information provided and the extent to which each program was more or less successful in participants’ learning. Using a SWOT analysis provides deep insights concerning the programs’ design, modeled after Bloom’s Taxonomy, in demonstrating favorable results in reaching learning objectives. Success was deduced by how participants’ responses in the open-ended questions of the post-event evaluation questionnaires correspond to the programs’ objectives and the extent to which learning modules engage participants at successively higher cognitive domains.
3.5.1. Principal Component Analysis
The purpose of this analysis was to use principal component scores derived from the principal component analysis in a multivariate linear regression model to assess which program design elements are more likely to indicate greater levels of program satisfaction. Using this two-step process offers several advantages. First, the design of the evaluation questionnaire has multiple questions where the answers are likely to be highly correlated. PCA reduces a large number of variables into a smaller set of linear combinations (i.e., components) which are then used as covariates in a regression analysis [
44,
45]. This eliminates issues of collinearity in our estimation procedure. Second, many studies use PCA in program evaluation for data reduction purposes. Using PCA, we can extract the features within the set of evaluation questions to determine which factor(s) most likely yield higher satisfaction scores. These results are important in calibrating course learning objectives for ongoing program evaluation. Finally, in using PCA, we can demonstrate the interrelation that exists between the different dimensions of curriculum design to determine the presence of latent patterns in students’ responses [
38]. These patterns can be detected if more than one component is statistically and significantly correlated to program satisfaction.
Due to data collection limitations, the PCA in the subsequent section focuses primarily on the STRIVE and T3 programs. The NYFSS post-event evaluation survey was substantively different from the post-event evaluation questionnaires for STRIVE and T3, thereby restricting comparisons. Data from the STRIVE and T3 programs were collected using uniform post-event evaluation questionnaires, which were not collected from NYFSS participants. Statistical analyses were conducted in Stata/MP v. 15.1.
3.5.2. SWOT Analysis
To complement the PCA, insights from participant evaluation instruments were developed into an aggregate SWOT analysis. The methodology for constructing the SWOT analysis was taken from “Strategy: Create and Implement the Best Strategy for Your Business,” published by the Harvard Business Review [
46]. Though SWOT analyses are primarily used for strategizing business and organizational decision-making, the tool has been adapted to consider the strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats of PWNA’s programs as they relate to program implementation and participant satisfaction.
Internal strengths (S) are aspects of program implementation that went well, as indicated by participant evaluation surveys and alignment with program objectives.
Internal barriers (W) are obstacles that prevented program implementation from running smoothly or affected participant satisfaction.
External opportunities (O) provide insight into new areas of growth through connections with community partners and community members.
External barriers (T) are obstacles out of control of PWNA staff that may threaten program attendance, participant engagement, and achievement of program outcomes. In the analysis that follows, we overlay this framework and provide specific insights into the programmatic design that would yield continued sustainable success.
Survey data collected at the NYFSS along with the open-ended responses to the post-event evaluation questionnaires from the STRIVE forum and T3, and the follow-up questionnaires from the T3, were used in the SWOT analysis.
6. Conclusions
This study evaluated the curriculum design, modeled after Bloom’s Taxonomy, of a Native-based nutrition education program and assessed how the programs were perceived by participants. The curricula emphasizes incorporating Indigenous elements into the program design and implementation such that Native beliefs and values are respected. The results indicate improvements to overall participant satisfaction and retention of information, which offers encouraging evidence toward behavioral change and, ultimately, improved health outcomes. Indicators of satisfaction must also be met with input from participants and the community to obtain effective results, as well as contributions from multiple disciplines. This study comes at an important time when the attention to Native American issues has been largely ignored.
While the results from this study offer a promising outlook on culturally appropriate nutrition education programming, effective curriculum design may not have the anticipated impact on behavioral change or health outcomes for reasons beyond the scope of the program and this study. Without proper evaluation methods, it is unclear whether there are persisting attitudes about healthy foods that would prevent families from fully utilizing the information they received in training. To expand the effectiveness of nutrition education programs, one might also consider the role of community members in serving as health champions. In programs that focus on disease management, patients consider care managers as playing a vital role in recovery [
50], so eliciting best practices from other wellness initiatives may be important to consider when developing strategies that address diet-related health outcomes. Nonetheless, multiple barriers to eating healthy foods exist and providing information is only one way to remove a portion of them. There are still the issues of accessing and affording healthy food and finding the time to prepare meals, of which other program types may be a solution. Regardless, a multifaceted approach will be required to make a substantial change in this area.
Beyond the scope of this study, it is important to recognize that numerous interventions targeting nutritional disparities exist that seek to break down existing barriers to acquiring healthy foods and adopting a more nutrient-rich diet; however, these either may not be available or suitable for introduction in Indian Country. Some programs aim to address environmental barriers, such as the lack of access to nearby grocery stores. Mobile produce trucks have emerged as a solution to address not only a lack of access to food retailers in underserved communities but also a lack of transportation for some households. Other programs focus on alleviating household barriers, such as a lack of access to financial resources. Many states now offer the DoubleUp Food Bucks program that allows families who participate in the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) to receive twice the amount of groceries with their benefits. Alternatively, adjusting some aspects of an individual’s environment has been shown to be more effective in changing consumer habits than providing information alone [
51]. “Nudging,” a theory rooted in soft paternalism, is a technique used to influence consumer behavior by limiting the available options to make the desirable choice easier to select [
52]. While this approach may work for participants from other populations, it could be met with resistance among the Native people due to their history with paternalistic influences and the resentment that has followed. The idea of nudging and soft paternalism is also mainly successful in environments where behavior can be influenced by changing the options available to them, such as a school cafeteria [
53,
54]. Although some success has been seen in implementing a community-based approach to changing the food retail environment [
55], nudging-based interventions may not be easily accomplished in Native American communities that often vary in resources across locations influencing many to leave their reservation to obtain their food elsewhere. Because little research has been completed on the extent to which information-based programs measure participant learning retention and the way information is provided to them, it is worthwhile to explore this mechanism in more depth. Any findings that support information as a mechanism for behavioral change add credibility to the existing literature and also provide a more culturally appropriate way to address nutrition issues within Native communities. Moreover, nutraceuticals, commonly deemed as “Westernized” products, have shown benefits in maintaining health and reducing the risk of chronic disease [
56]. Many of the benefits derived from these supplements mimic the medicinal properties of Indigenous plants that are used by traditional healers [
57]. In this way, encouraging nutrition education programs that not only aim to promote a healthy diet but take advantage of Native traditions can prove to have peripheral benefits.
Future research will explore ways to improve program evaluation such that evaluation methods are culturally sensitive and still effective at measuring social impact. To determine if these food education programs are effective in improving health outcomes, sufficient program evaluation is needed. This will further validate the impact of curriculum design on achieving an improved nutritional outcome in Native communities, in addition to the development of more sustainable programs through better utilization of program resources intended for long-term impact on participants. Additionally, this will also communicate to stakeholders the rationale for continuing financial support for these programs.