Development and Implementation of a 3-Week Whole-Food Plant-Based Vegan Diet Intervention for College Students

J Nutr Educ Behav. 2024 Dec 14:S1499-4046(24)00507-4. doi: 10.1016/j.jneb.2024.11.003. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

Objective: To describe the research methods used for the Diet and Health Study, a pilot-feasibility study to assess the impact of a whole-food plant-based vegan diet on college students' physical and mental health.

Design: This 3-week theory-based pilot-feasibility study will employ a stratified, randomized control design (2 intervention groups and 1 comparison group) with measurement of primary and secondary outcomes at baseline and postintervention and end-of-study focus groups.

Setting: Southeastern public state university.

Participants: Sixty undergraduate college students aged 18-25 years.

Intervention: The study and intervention delivery were designed using an integration of the Theory of Planned Behavior and Social Cognitive Theory. Three consecutive weekly nutrition education lunch-and-learn sessions (75 minutes each) will be delivered using 2 different teaching modalities (ie, interactive-experiential vs lecture-based).

Main outcome measures: (1) Feasibility and acceptability of study procedures and theoretically-informed whole-food plant-based vegan diet intervention; (2) potential impacts of the intervention on intrapersonal, physical, and mental health, and dietary measures; and (3) potential differential impacts of 2 intervention modalities.

Analysis: Descriptive statistics and effect sizes to assess changes to the outcome variables from baseline to postintervention across the 3 groups. Qualitative content analysis of the focus group transcripts.

Keywords: diet intervention; plant-based; vegan; whole-food.