Bringing local food education to workplaces
Assessing needs for a health and wellness program
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.5304/jafscd.2024.134.013
Keywords:
local foods, Cooperative Extension, health and wellness program, nutrition education, workplace wellness, community supported agricultureAbstract
Family and Consumer Sciences (FCS) Extension educators have a long history of providing education to help individuals, families, and communities. Since the 1980s, however, FCS has been described as at a crossroads, lacking a unified vision of how to maintain relevance in a changing society. FCS programs have had reduced enrollment and attendance, leaving FCS educators seeking new audiences. Many workplaces now have employee wellness and education programs that are an emerging opportunity for FCS educators. FCS is inherently interdisciplinary, bringing together many food-related topics such as cooking, nutrition education, and food preservation. This interdisciplinary focus makes local food systems an important opportunity for new FCS educational programs. Workplace community supported agriculture (CSA) programs, which connect local farmers and employees via employer-sponsored cost-offsets, are an emerging model increasingly adopted by employers to support employee health and wellness. Where they have been implemented, however, they have often been complemented by only limited education, in part due to lack of a formal local food–focused health and wellness curriculum. The purpose of this study was to gain information to guide the development of a local food health and wellness education program that would complement a workplace CSA program. The study assessed potential workplace wellness program participants’ perceived knowledge, attitudes, and barriers to purchasing and cooking local food, and the types of information that would be most useful in the education program and participants’ preferred program format. Respondents had positive attitudes about local food, but limited knowledge about how to purchase and prepare it. Respondents indicated that an education program that provided information on those topics, as well as information about unusual fruits and vegetables grown locally and how to reduce food waste would be most useful to them. Respondents preferred online program offerings during weekday lunchtimes. These findings provide guidance for designing a local food health and wellness education program tailored to this audience. We conclude by sharing some recommendations for developing or delivering programs.
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Copyright (c) 2024 Cody Gusto, Catherine Campbell, Annie Wallau, Wendy Wood
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