Children eat more vegetables after reward

Brightlands Campus Greenport Venlo

How do you get your kids to eat more vegetables? It's an issue many parents struggle with. A pilot at 26 day-care centers in North Limburg shows that when children are offered vegetables on a daily basis and are rewarded for eating them, vegetable consumption goes way up.

Toddlers should eat at least 50 to 100 grams of vegetables per day, according to the guideline. Yet too often it appears that children do not consume the recommended amounts. One of the reasons for this is that children often don't like the green snacks on their plate. But how do you get them to eat the tomato, cucumber or carrot? 

Supermarket chain ALDI and JOGG have been working together since 2018 to promote a healthy lifestyle among families with young children. From this cooperation, a pilot with the program Vegetable Boxes has rolled out in which 26 day-care centers in North Limburg have participated with the aim: to stimulate the vegetable consumption of young children. 

Almost 600 children at day-care centers in Venlo, Venray and Weert participated in the pilot. Through the program, educators and pedagogical staff received practical tools to integrate vegetables as a snack into the daily rhythm of the children, at home and at the daycare center. The program also included practical materials to make vegetables part of the day at the daycare center in a fun and stimulating way. 

Maastricht University studied the effect of the program. Britt van Belkom, researcher at the Chair of Youth, Nutrition & Health at Maastricht University Campus Venlo, conducted the study.

Read more on the Brightlands-website (article in Dutch).

Also read

  • Fresh air

    Newly appointed professor Judith Sluimer (CARIM) talks about oxygen in heart functioning and the 'fresh air' the academic world needs.

    judith sluimer
  • Measuring the true impact of Epilepsy

    Epilepsy is a condition that extends far beyond its visible symptoms, affecting the daily lives, well-being, and financial stability of patients and their caregivers. For Darin Elabbasy, PhD student at CAPHRI (VHC), understanding these broader impacts is at the heart of her work. 

    Epilepsy - the true impact
  • New Scholarship Opportunity: Rachel and Alan Wyatt STS Scholarship

    The Rachel and Alan Wyatt STS Scholarship has been established to support students wishing to pursue a master’s degree in Science and Technology Studies (STS). In memory of her parents, the scholarship has been established by Sally Wyatt, Professor of Digital Cultures in our Faculty of Arts and...

    Scholarship Wyatt