Cover page
Title page
Certification
Dedication
Acknowledgement
Abstract
Organization of the work
Table of Contents
Chapter ONE
Background of the study
Statement of problem
Significance of the study
Research questions
Scope of the study
Limitation of the study
Chapter TWO
Literature review
Nutrition requirement of teenage girls
Food intake pattern of Nigeria teenage girls
Effect of poor dietary choice
Impact of nutrition education on nutrition intake
Chapter THREE
Research methodology
Design of study
Population of study
Sample and sampling techniques
Instrumentation
Validation of instrument
Method of data collection
Method of data analysis
Chapter FOUR
Data presentation and analysis
Socio-demographic characteristic of subjects
Dietary habit data
Nutrition knowledge scores
Nutrition intake
Chapter FIVE
Summary
Conclusion
Recommendation
REFERENCES
Thesis Overview
INTRODUCTION
1.0 BACKGROUND OF THE STUDY
Nutrition education is any combination of educational
strategies, accompanied by environmental supports, designed to
facilitate voluntary adoption of food choices and other food- and
nutrition- related behaviour conducive to health and well-being.
Nutrition education is delivered through multiple venues and
involves activities of the individual, community, and policy levels
(Jones and Bartletti, 2007).
This definition has been adopted by the society for nutrition
education and behaviour and was authored by Dr. Isobel Contento, a
leading authority in nutrition education. The work of nutrition
educators takes place in colleges, universities and schools, government
agencies, cooperative extension, communications and public relations
firms, the food industry, voluntary and service organizations and with
other reliable places of nutrition and health education information.
The American Dietetic Association (ADA) published a position
paper regarding the nutritional needs of teenagers. This paper stated
that the health of adolescents is dependent on normal dietary intakes
and that the provision of foods that contain adequate energy and
nutrients was essential for physical, social and cognitive growth and
development.
Adequate nutrient intake during adolescence is very important
for many reasons. Adolescence is a particularly unique period of life
because it is a time of intense physical, psychological and cognitive
development.
Adolescence is a transition phase to adulthood. The age of
adolescence encapsulates a window of time when bodies are metamorphosing
and evolving into that of an adult. It is a time when the adolescent
tries to establish his own identify yet desperately seeks to be socially
accepted by his peers (Lulinski, 2001). During adolescence hormonal
changes accelerate growth in height. Growth is faster than at any other
time in the individual’s life except the first year (Brasel, 1982).
Increased nutritional needs at this juncture relate to the fact that
adolescents gain up to 50% of their adult weight, more than 20% of their
adult height and 50% of their adult skeletal mass during this period
(Brasel, 1982). The adolescent therefore face series of serious
nutritional challenges which would impact on this rapid growth spurt as
well as their health as adults. However, the adolescent remain a largely
neglected, difficult to-measure, hard-to-reach population.
Consequently, the needs, particularly those of adolescent girls are
often ignored (Kurz and Johnson-Welch, 1994).
At this developmental stages, protein requirements maximal.
Increased physical activity, combined with poor eating habit and other
considerations, for example, menstruation, oral contraceptive use and
pregnancy contribute to accentuating the potential risk for adolescents
of poor nutrition.
1.1 STATEMENT OF PROBLEM
Poor nutritional choices and practices have been shown to
increase during adolescence; the need for nutrition education becomes
clear. It is important that health educators look into nutrition
education and its impact on the dietary habits of adolescent females.
Several studies have been conducted that show how nutrition education
impacts the dietary habits of adolescents.
These studies have reviewed the effect of nutrition education
on adolescent athletes and have analyzed how nutrition education
impacts snack patterns.
The main nutritional problems affecting adolescent
populations in particular include under-nutrition in terms of stunning
and wasting. Others are deficiencies of micronutrients such as iron and
vitamin a, obesity and other specific nutrient deficiencies (Kurz and
Johnson-Welch, 1994).
Adolescents because they are still growing, who enter into
marriage with poor nutritional status are likely to give birth to
smaller infants than mature women of the same nutritional status (WHO,
1995) because of the competition for nutrients between the growing
adolescent and the growing fetus (Scholl et al, 1990) andpoorer
placental function (Colson, 1987). Undernourished adolescent girls and
women give birth to underweight and often stunned babies. These infants
are less able to learn as young children and are more likely themselves
to be parents to infants with intrauterine growth.
Retardation and low birth weight. However, they are less able
to generate livelihoods and are less equipped to resist chronic
diseases in later life. Such lifecycle and intergenerational links
demand sustained, long term ameliorative action (ACC/SCN, 2000) which
this study aims to provide.
1.2 PURPOSE OF THE STUDY
- To assess the impact of nutrition education on the nutritional intake of female secondary school students.
- To educate adolescent girls about sources of nutrient and balance diet.
- To help improve the eating habits of adolescent girls.
- To serve as a guide to nutrition educators and dieticians
- To recommend nutrition education as part of the curriculum of secondary school in Nigeria.
1.3 SIGNIFICANCE OF THE STUDY
The aim of this study is to outline the importance of
nutrition education to improving the nutrient intake of adolescent
girls.
One particular group of interest is the adolescent female few
studies have reviewed the impact of nutrition education on the dietary
intakes of the average adolescent female. In the present study, the
effect of a term long nutrition education class on the dietary habits of
adolescent females in secondary schools in Benin City was examined.
This study compared dietary intakes of female students who completed a
nutrition education class to female students who did not. The findings
in the present study are important in that they help nutrition educators
and dietician understands if adolescent female who are provide with a
one term time period will develop better eating habits than females who
do not receive nutrition education.
1.4 RESEARCH QUESTIONS
This research questions will be on socio-demographic
characteristics of adolescent girls, their dietary habits and
nutritional knowledge.
1.5 SCOPE OF THE STUDY
This study shall be restricted to secondary school in Egor
L.G.A, Edo State of Nigeria only in the realization of similar condition
facing female students in other states of Nigeria. The survey shall be
on nutrient intake only of adolescent girls.
Nutrition education lectures shall be held for the subjects
and pamphlets and handouts shall be used to facilitate the lectures.