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Social norms and diet in adolescents
- Source :
- Appetite. 57:623-627
- Publication Year :
- 2011
- Publisher :
- Elsevier BV, 2011.
-
Abstract
- We hypothesized that adolescents misperceive social norms for food consumption, and aimed to test this, and examine associations between perceived norms and dietary behaviours. School pupils (n=264) in the UK, aged 16-19 years, completed a questionnaire about their own attitudes to, and intake of, fruits and vegetables, unhealthy snacks and sugar-sweetened drinks, and their perceptions of their peers' attitudes to (injunctive norms), and intake of (descriptive norms), the same foods. Misperceptions were calculated from differences between perceived norms and median self-reports of peer groups. Respondents overestimated their peers' intake of snacks by 1.8 portions a week, and sugar-sweetened drinks by 5.2 portions, and overestimated how positive their peers' attitudes were towards these behaviours. They underestimated their peers' consumption of fruits and vegetables by 3.2 portions per week and how positive their peers' attitudes were towards fruit and vegetables. Descriptive norms were strongly associated with intake of fruit and vegetables, sugar-sweetened drinks, and unhealthy snacks, explaining between 17% and 22% of the variance in consumption. There was no association between injunctive norms and intake. Descriptive norms indicated that misperceptions of peers' food intake were associated with respondents' own intake. Interventions to correct misperceptions have the potential to improve adolescents' diets.
- Subjects :
- Male
Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice
Adolescent
Cross-sectional study
Adolescent Nutritional Physiological Phenomena
education
Psychological intervention
Behavioural sciences
Peer Group
Body Mass Index
Beverages
Young Adult
Social norms approach
Surveys and Questionnaires
Environmental health
Vegetables
Humans
General Psychology
Consumption (economics)
Nutrition and Dietetics
digestive, oral, and skin physiology
Theory of planned behavior
food and beverages
Peer group
Feeding Behavior
humanities
Diet
Cross-Sectional Studies
Socioeconomic Factors
Fruit
Multivariate Analysis
Female
Food, Organic
Psychology
Social psychology
Body mass index
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 01956663
- Volume :
- 57
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Appetite
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....742fbe677cd6fbd2c2579a3a6f5871dd
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1016/j.appet.2011.07.015