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Systems Science Approaches to Improve Access to Healthier Foods: The FRESH Trial
Sponsor: Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
Summary
Working with independently owned restaurants, a common source of calorie-rich, nutrient-poor foods in predominantly minority, low-income urban neighborhoods, has the potential to improve dietary quality, and contribute to cancer prevention. This study uses systems science approaches to improve access to healthier foods in independently owned restaurants by: 1) testing the effects of a novel intervention called FRESH (Focus on Restaurant Engagement to Strengthen Health) on dietary quality, health indicators and other outcomes in African American and Latin communities, and 2) developing a system dynamics model to allow stakeholders to virtually test FRESH strategies in their own communities. The resulting restaurant intervention simulation model offers potential cost savings from avoided trial-and-error testing, and will support community-based cancer prevention.
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
18 Years - 75 Years
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
756
Start Date
2023-06-01
Completion Date
2026-10-31
Last Updated
2025-05-30
Healthy Volunteers
Yes
Conditions
Interventions
Multilevel restaurant intervention to improve the food environment
FRESH is a restaurant-based intervention in low-income neighborhoods in Baltimore, MD and the Washington, District of Columbia metro area that aims to improve the healthy prepared-food environment for consumers, informed by community members and other stakeholders. FRESH intervention components include food preparation, food access and procurement, and consumer nutrition environment. Activities will take place over 16 months, and include training restaurant chefs to use healthier cooking methods, partnering with restaurant suppliers to offer healthier ingredients, and offering point-of-purchase promotions to educate customers on the healthier promoted food options. Intervention staff will form strong relationships with restaurant owners and chefs via in-person visits at least twice a month. Data from the intervention trial will inform the development of a system dynamics simulation model that will allow stakeholders to test new policy ideas prior to implementation.
Locations (1)
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
Baltimore, Maryland, United States