Veg Power announced today that its highly effective and hugely popular multi award-winning Eat Them To Defeat Them campaign is returning to primary schools across the UK from Monday 10th March. Now in its seventh year, the campaign proven to increase children’s vegetable consumption, will build on the behaviour change success achieved in previous years.
Eat Them To Defeat Them was launched in 2019 to help tackle one of the major public health issues in the UK – poor vegetable consumption. 80% of children are not eating enough vegetables and worryingly a third of kids are eating less than a portion per day.
The Eat Them To Defeat Them campaign inspires kids to eat more veg in school and to continue that behaviour at home. It brings together a huge alliance including celebrities, supermarkets, chefs, schools, communities and families. Over the last six years, over 1.5 million different children from over 5,000 primary and special schools have benefited from participation in the schools’ programme. This year, 400,000 children across the UK are expected to participate and the campaign has been sponsored by major supermarket and food brands Co-op, Sainsbury’s and Tilda.
The schools’ programme has responded to feedback from schools and caterers to allow for greater flexibility. Resources will be supplied for five veg-themed days (carrots, broccoli, red peppers, peas and sweetcorn) that the catering teams can implement at any time. The campaign will also be brought to life in schools via decorations for the dining hall/kitchen hatch, participation stickers for the children, take home packs including a reward chart and stickers for each child together with resources to support the teachers and catering teams including lesson plans, introduction assembly and guidance booklets.
Dan Parker, Chief Executive, Veg Power said, “We’re delighted with the impact that our schools’ programme is having on children’s veg eating habits and that it is also leading to behaviour change within the family unit – with parents and siblings also benefiting from increased vegetable consumption. This is so important because not only will it mean that we’re having a positive impact on dietary health but we’re helping to form veg eating habits in childhood that as the research shows are likely to be continued into adulthood.”