Fruits and vegetables provide nutrients that are vital for health. Whether fresh, frozen or dried, they can help to reduce the risk of some chronic diseases like high cholesterol and cancer. Despite these benefits, many still struggle to get enough servings of produce per day.
That’s where the Fruit and Veggie Challenge comes in. Faculty and staff can join the online six-week challenge to take steps to eat more produce. Registration is now open. The challenge starts July 10.
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The Fruit and Veggie Challenge is simple. Participants focus on servings instead of counting calories, weighing food or measuring portions.
The goal is to eat at least 130 servings of fruits and vegetables over six weeks, between July 10 and Aug. 20. That works out to about four servings of produce most days of the week. Participants will log servings in the program’s online tracker.
Throughout the challenge, participants receive weekly emails with recipes, videos, tips and more.
The challenge is open to active, benefits-eligible faculty and staff and their spouse/other qualified adult enrolled in a U-M health plan. Participants can sign up for the Fruit and Veggie Challenge on the MHealthy Portal, powered by Asset Health.