The LO-VEg Project-A School-Based Nudging and Communication Intervention to Promote Vegetable and Legume Consumption: Preliminary Evidence from an Ecological Study in Italian Primary Schools

LO-VEg 项目——一项以学校为基础的引导和沟通干预措施,旨在促进蔬菜和豆类的消费:来自意大利小学生态学研究的初步证据

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Abstract

Background/Objectives: In Italy, food waste within school meal services represents a major public health and sustainability challenge, with approximately 21.7% of meals discarded, and vegetables and legumes among the most frequently rejected components. Low consumption of these foods during childhood contributes to unhealthy dietary trajectories and increased long-term cardiometabolic risk. Evidence indicates that information-based nutrition education alone is insufficient to modify children's eating behaviors within complex food environments. This study aimed to describe and evaluate the LO-VEg project, a school-based intervention designed to address dietary behavior and food waste simultaneously by integrating environmental nudging with child-centered communication strategies. Methods: The LO-VEg project was implemented as a quasi-experimental ecological school-based intervention combining environmental nudging strategies and multisensory communication tools to promote vegetable and legume consumption in primary school canteens. The intervention involved approximately 1500 pupils across four primary schools in the Lombardy region of Italy and was conducted over a 10-week period within routine school meal settings. Consumption outcomes were assessed through aggregated anonymous plate-waste observations collected during school meals. Results: Preliminary aggregated analyses indicated favorable trends in vegetable and legume consumption and plate-waste reduction during the intervention period. The broader intervention architecture also included communication, digital, and family-oriented components, which are described in the present manuscript as part of the implementation framework. Conclusions: The LO-VEg project suggests that integrating environmental nudging with child-centered communication strategies may represent a scalable approach to improving dietary behaviors and reducing food waste in school settings.

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