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Methods to assess ambivalence toward food and diet: a scoping review protocol

Authors :
Simon L. Bacon
Kim L. Lavoie
Daisuke Hayashi Neto
Marilia E. Cornélio
Paula A.B. Ribeiro
Samantha Dalbosco Lins Carvalho
Source :
JBI Evidence Synthesis. 20:1142-1149
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2021.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE This scoping review aims to identify and understand the different tools and methods used in studies in the field of human eating behavior to assess, measure, or classify participants' ambivalence towards food and diet, as well as to identify which tools and methods are most frequently employed. INTRODUCTION People's attitudes towards foods and eating behaviors are often ambivalent (simultaneously positive and negative), making it harder to change eating behaviors in favor of a healthier diet. This highlights the importance of resolving diet-related ambivalence. Identifying and understanding the different methods used in the literature to assess attitudinal ambivalence towards food and diet will provide researchers with a range of options to choose from for future studies. INCLUSION CRITERIA We will include peer-reviewed studies as well as preprints that assess the ambivalence of human participants towards food and diet, regardless of sex, age, or other sociodemographic factors. We will exclude studies in which the methods used to assess ambivalence aren't detailed or can't be reproduced, as well as studies that assessed the ambivalence of participants towards farming and agricultural methods or towards methods of food production and preparation. METHODS This review will follow JBI methodology for scoping reviews. Peer-reviewed studies will be retrieved from MEDLINE, PsycINFO, Web of Science, Food Science Source, FSTA, and CINAHL, and preprints will be retrieved from PsyArXiv and MedArXiv. Two independent reviewers will screen the articles. All relevant extracted information will be presented as tables and a descriptive summary of the findings.

Details

ISSN :
26898381
Volume :
20
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
JBI Evidence Synthesis
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2e8716a817ac74265a3d01d728d81741