151 results
Search Results
2. Comparison of text messaging and paper-and-pencil for ecological momentary assessment of food craving and intake.
- Author
-
Berkman, Elliot T., Giuliani, Nicole R., and Pruitt, Alicia K.
- Subjects
- *
ECOLOGICAL momentary assessments (Clinical psychology) , *FOOD habits , *ELECTRONIC equipment , *BODY mass index , *TEXT messages - Abstract
Electronic devices such as mobile phones are quickly becoming a popular way to gather participant reports of everyday thoughts, feelings, and behaviors, including food cravings and intake. Electronic devices offer a number of advantages over alternative methods such as paper-and-pencil (PNP) assessment including automated prompts, on-the-fly data transmission, and participant familiarity with and ownership of the devices. However, only a handful of studies have systematically compared compliance between electronic and PNP methods of ecological momentary assessment (EMA), and none have examined eating specifically. Existing comparisons generally find greater compliance for electronic devices than PNP, but there is variability in the results across studies that may be accounted for by differences across research domains. Here, we compared the two EMA methods in an unexamined domain - eating - in terms of response rate and response latency, and their sensitivity to individual difference variables such as body mass index (BMI). Forty-four participants were randomly assigned to report on their food craving, food intake, and hunger four times each day for 2 weeks using either a PNP diary (N = 19) or text messaging (TXT; N = 25). Response rates were higher for TXT than PNP (96% vs. 70%) and latencies were faster (29 min vs. 79 min), and response rate and latency were less influenced by BMI in the TXT condition than in the PNP condition. These results support the feasibility of using text messaging for EMA in the eating domain, and more broadly highlight the ways that research domain-specific considerations (e.g., the importance of response latency in measuring short-lived food craving) interact with assessment modality during EMA. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Introduction to four papers on Curt Richter and analysis of his scientific practice
- Author
-
Smith, Gerard P.
- Subjects
- *
NUTRITION & psychology , *APPETITE , *FOOD habits , *FOOD preferences , *HISTORY of physiology , *HISTORY , *NUTRITIONAL requirements - Abstract
Abstract: Curt Richter was one of the founders of our field. He did outstanding research for over 60 years. Richter did fundamental work in appetite for food and minerals in the 1930s and discovered the homeostatic functions of ingestive behavior. This paper introduces four papers on specific topics of his work by contemporaneous experts. Each of the papers reviews Richter''s experiments and then shows how the problem developed since he left it. The papers demonstrate that providing the historical basis for contemporary science is not only instructive, it is also heuristic for the science waiting to be done. In addition to introducing the four papers, I analyze the scientific ideas, values, and men that influenced Richter''s scientific practice. I conclude that Claude Bernard, Walter Cannon, Francois Magendie, and Maurice Arthus were important for Richter''s scientific ideas and values, but it was the joy of research that explains his experimental success for over 60 years. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. The effectiveness of personalised food choice advice tailored to an individual's socio-demographic, cognitive characteristics, and sensory preferences.
- Author
-
Briazu, R.A., Bell, L., Dodd, G.F., Blackburn, S., Massri, C., Chang, B., Fischaber, S., Kehlbacher, A., Williams, C.M., Methven, L., and McCloy, R.
- Subjects
- *
FOOD habits , *POPULATION health , *CONSUMPTION (Economics) , *ADVICE , *SUGAR , *FOOD preferences - Abstract
Personalised dietary advice has become increasingly popular, currently however most approaches are based on an individual's genetic and phenotypic profile whilst largely ignoring other determinants such as socio economic and cognitive variables. This paper provides novel insights by testing the effectiveness of personalised healthy eating advice concurrently tailored to an individual's socio-demographic group, cognitive characteristics, and sensory preferences. We first used existing data to build a synthetic dataset based on information from 3654 households (Study 1a), and then developed a cluster model to identify individuals characterised by similar socio-demographic, cognitive, and sensory aspects (Study 1b). Finally, in Study 2 we used the characteristics of 8 clusters to build 8 separate personalised food choice advice and assess their ability to motivate the increased consumption of fruit and vegetables and decreased intakes of saturated fat and sugar. We presented 218 participants with either generic UK Government "EatWell" advice, advice that was tailored to their allocated cluster (matched personalised), or advice tailored to a different cluster (unmatched personalised). Results showed that, when compared to generic advice, participants that received matched personalised advice were significantly more likely to indicate they would change their diet. Participants were similarly motivated to increase vegetable consumption and decrease saturated fat intake when they received unmatched personalised advice, potentially highlighting the power of providing alternative food choices. Overall, this study demonstrated that the power of personalizing food choice advice, based on a combination of individual characteristics, can be more effective than current approaches in motivating dietary change. Our study also emphasizes the viability of addressing population health through automatically delivered web-based personalised advice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. A systematic review of practices to promote vegetable acceptance in the first three years of life.
- Author
-
Barends, Coraline, Weenen, Hugo, Warren, Janet, Hetherington, Marion M., de Graaf, Cees, and de Vries, Jeanne H.M.
- Subjects
- *
CHILD nutrition , *AGE groups , *VEGETABLES , *FOOD consumption , *META-analysis , *FOOD habits , *INFANTS , *NUTRITIONAL requirements , *DIET , *FOOD preferences , *BREASTFEEDING , *TASTE - Abstract
Background: Although most children do not meet vegetable intake recommendations no clear universal guidelines exist on the best method of introducing and promoting vegetables in infants.Objective: To identify strategies to promote vegetable acceptance in children from the start of complementary feeding until 3 years of age.Design: A comprehensive search strategy was performed using the databases Scopus and Pubmed. Articles published before March 2018 measuring vegetable intake and/or liking were included.Results: 46 papers, 25 experimental (intervention) studies, and 21 observational studies were included. Intervention studies revealed that repeated exposure increased acceptance of the target vegetable, whereas exposure to variety was found to be particularly effective in increasing acceptance of a new vegetable. Starting complementary feeding with vegetables increased vegetable acceptance, whereas starting with fruits did not. Visual exposure to an unfamiliar vegetable increased the acceptance of that vegetable even without consuming it, while visual exposure to a familiar vegetable did not. A stepwise introduction of vegetables resulted in better initial acceptance of vegetables than introducing vegetables directly. Observational studies showed that vegetable consumption was associated with frequency of exposure, exposure to variety, and modelling. A majority of studies found a positive association between breastfeeding and vegetable acceptance, but only two out of seven studies found an association between age of vegetable introduction and their acceptance.Conclusions: Based on the papers reviewed, we conclude that introducing vegetables at the beginning of complementary feeding, giving a different type of vegetable every day and ensuring repeated exposure to the same vegetable following an interval of a few days are the most promising strategies to promote vegetable intake in children starting complementary feeding until they are 3 years of age. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. The effect of food type on the portion size effect in children aged 2-12 years: A systematic review and meta-analysis.
- Author
-
Reale, S., Hamilton, J., Akparibo, R., Hetherington, M.M., Cecil, J.E., and Caton, S.J.
- Subjects
- *
AGE groups , *CHILD nutrition , *FOOD portions , *META-analysis , *FOOD packaging , *FOOD habits , *SYSTEMATIC reviews , *FOOD , *RESEARCH funding - Abstract
Visual cues such as plate size, amount of food served and packaging are known to influence the effects of portion size on food intake. Unit bias is a well characterised heuristic and helps to determine consumption norms. In an obesogenic environment where large portions are common place, the unit or segmentation bias may be overridden promoting overconsumption of both amorphous or unit foods. The aim of this review was to investigate the impact of offering unit or amorphous food on the portion size effect (PSE) in children aged 2-12 years. A systematic search for literature was conducted in Medline, PsycInfo and Web of Science in February 2018. A total of 1197 papers were retrieved following the searches. Twenty-one papers were included in the systematic review, of which 15 provided requisite statistical information for inclusion in a random effects meta-analysis. Increasing children's food portion size by 51-100% led to a significant increase in intake (SMD = 0.47, 95% CI: 0.39-0.55). There was no evidence to suggest that increases in consumption were related to food type (p = 0.33), child age (p = 0.47) or initial portion size served (p=0.14). Residual heterogeneity was not significant (p=0.24). The PSE was demonstrated in children aged 2-12 years when offered both unit and amorphous food items. The effect was not restricted by food type, child age or influenced by initial portion size served. Of the studies included in the meta-analysis between study heterogeneity was low suggesting minimal variation in treatment effects between studies, however, more research is required to understand the mechanisms of the PSE in preschool children. Future research should determine feasible methods to downsize portion sizes served to children. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. "If I became a vegan, my family and friends would hate me:" Anticipating vegan stigma as a barrier to plant-based diets.
- Author
-
Markowski, Kelly L. and Roxburgh, Susan
- Subjects
- *
VEGETARIANISM , *OMNIVORES , *PUBLIC health , *MEAT industry , *HEALTH of college students , *FOOD habits , *FRIENDSHIP , *MEAT , *ATTITUDE (Psychology) , *SOCIAL norms , *SOCIAL stigma , *FAMILIES , *FEAR , *PLANTS , *EMOTIONS - Abstract
A significant body of literature has developed which examines why meat consumption continues to be so important to Americans. Our paper contributes to this literature by examining how fear of stigmatization may be a barrier to avoiding meat consumption. This is an important subject because there is evidence that suggests that individuals who avoid meat, especially vegans, are stigmatized for disrupting social conventions related to food. In this paper, we present data from a series of focus groups in which vegan, vegetarian, and omnivorous college students discussed perceptions of vegans and veganism. Our analysis shows that non-vegans anticipate stigma associated with eating like vegans. We identify two strategies by which non-vegans attempt to avoid this stigma: social and behavioral distancing. These results suggest that vegan stigma is a barrier that inhibits dietary shifts toward a plant-based diet. Our results are important because they can be used to improve the efficacy of public health initiatives focused on encouraging plant-based diet adoption and meat consumption reduction. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Development of the modified Highly Processed Food Withdrawal Scale (mProWS).
- Author
-
Hu, Shuchen, Gearhardt, Ashley N., and LaFata, Erica M.
- Subjects
- *
COMPULSIVE eating , *DIETARY patterns , *PROCESSED foods , *ECOLOGICAL momentary assessments (Clinical psychology) , *PSYCHOMETRICS , *FOOD habits - Abstract
The Highly Processed Food Withdrawal Scale (ProWS) is a 29-item measure that operationalizes physical and psychological indicators of withdrawal symptoms associated with cutting down on the consumption of ultra-processed foods. The current study developed a briefer 7-item version of the ProWS (modified ProWS; mProWS) using the participant sample from the ProWS validation paper (n = 231). Then, in an independent sample recruited from Amazon Mechanical Turk, 244 participants (55.3% females) completed the mProWS, the ProWS, and measures of eating-related constructs in order to evaluate the psychometric properties of the mProWS, relative to the ProWS. The mProWS and the ProWS performed similarly on indexes of reliability, convergent validity with addictive-like eating behavior (e.g., Yale Food Addiction Scale 2.0 symptom count), discriminant validity with distinct measures (e.g., cognitive desire to restrict food consumption), and incremental validity evidenced by associations with weight cycling above and beyond body mass index (BMI) and YFAS 2.0 symptoms. The mProWS may be an appropriate choice for studies with higher participant burden (e.g., ecological momentary assessment) to assess withdrawal symptoms in real-time when they occur in response to cutting down on ultra-processed foods. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Daring to taste: The organisation of children's tasting practices during preschool lunches.
- Author
-
Wiggins, Sally, Cromdal, Jakob, and Willemsen, Annerose
- Subjects
- *
GAZE , *DISCURSIVE psychology , *FOOD habits , *TASTE , *DIETARY patterns , *TASTE testing of food - Abstract
Tasting food is the first step toward diversifying eating habits, and studies with children have typically focused on their sensory education and willingness to try new foods. While very little is known about how children taste foods during everyday mealtimes, EMCA (ethnomethodological and conversation analytic) research on adult tasting in naturalistic settings has demonstrated regular organisational patterns. This paper brings these two research areas together, using the insights of EMCA research on adult tasting to inform our understanding of how young children taste food during preschool lunches. Data are taken from a large corpus of video-recorded lunches in Sweden, in which children (3- to 6-year-olds) were eating with staff members. Discursive Psychology and multimodal Conversation Analysis were used to analyse the data. The analysis demonstrates how the sequential organisation of child tasting is similar to adult tasting, and how tasting practices are a collaborative, multisensory activity involving various embodied practices: from the orientation to food as 'to be tasted', the withdrawal of mutual gaze and exaggerated mouth movements, to the re-establishment of gaze accompanying the food assessment. In contrast to adult tasting, however, tasting during preschool lunches is often framed in terms of personal development of the child and of the individualising of taste within the framework of the institution. The findings thus provide further support for EMCA research on sensory practices and contribute to psychological research on children's eating by evidencing the importance of the interactional and institutional context on tasting as a sensory practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Deciphering the consumer behaviour facets of functional foods: A literature review.
- Author
-
Kaur, Navdeep and Singh, Devinder Pal
- Subjects
- *
CONSUMER behavior , *FUNCTIONAL foods , *LITERATURE reviews , *FOOD habits , *SOCIOCULTURAL factors , *ATTITUDE (Psychology) , *CUSTOMER satisfaction , *DIET , *FOOD preferences - Abstract
This paper presents a systematic literature review of studies investigating various facets of consumer behaviour towards functional foods. It focuses on published international research on functional food attitude and behaviour from across the world. Research papers (n = 112) that were identified were coded in terms of study type, variables studied, product type, participant profile, research methodology and analysis details, as well as results and implications for future research. Results provide a systematic overview of the context in which behaviour towards functional foods have been examined in the past and provide a synthesis of findings in four categories of determinants, namely (1) Personal Factors, (2) Psychological Factors, (3) Cultural & Social Factors, and (4) Factors relating to the functional food product. A reference model for the relationships between these factors and behaviour of consumers is derived. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. The migrant suitcase: Food, belonging and commensality among Indian migrants in The Netherlands.
- Author
-
Bailey, Ajay
- Subjects
- *
FOOD habits , *MATERIAL culture , *REMITTANCES , *FAMILY relations , *COOKING , *CULTURE , *EMIGRATION & immigration , *FOOD , *INGESTION , *SOCIAL adjustment , *QUALITATIVE research , *PHENOMENOLOGICAL biology , *NOMADS , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
The Migrant Suitcase is a metaphor to understand how social remittances are taken, brought back and transformed. Migrants bring with them different cultural norms, food and eating practices. In this paper I review the concept of social remittances in light of material culture, food and eating practices and examine the linkages between food, belonging, commensality and care and then provide empirical examples from the suitcases of Indian migrants. This paper is based on 30 in-depth interviews conducted among Indian migrants living in The Netherlands. The main themes from the data included food from home, cooking practices, food sharing and family relationships. Migrants' sense of belonging was intrinsically related to the food they brought from home and the memories it generates. The practices of cooking and sensorial experiences surrounding them demonstrate the place and home making processes. Commensality with co-ethnics led to a sense of community and stronger community bonds. Commensality with other non-Indian groups was perceived to be problematic. The exchanges of food, eating practices, and care create a sense of 'co-presence' in lives migrants and their transnational families. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Systematic review of pharmacological treatments that reduce conditioned taste aversions in rodents: A potential animal model of pediatric feeding disorder and avoidant/restrictive food intake disorder (ARFID).
- Author
-
Parent, Marise B., Whitley, Kathryn E., Zafar, Usama, Zickgraf, Hana F., and Sharp, William G.
- Subjects
- *
INGESTION disorders , *FOOD consumption , *DRUG therapy , *FOOD habits , *ANIMAL models in research , *COMPULSIVE eating , *THERAPEUTIC alliance - Abstract
Avoidant/restrictive food intake disorder (ARFID) is diagnosed when food avoidance leads to clinically significant nutritional, weight/growth, or psychosocial impairment. As many as 81.5% of children and adolescents diagnosed with ARFID have a history of a medical condition associated with pain, fatigue, or malaise. ARFID is diagnosed and treatment begins after the medical condition is resolved but food avoidance remains. Effective treatment involves repeated exposure to eating food and related stimuli aimed at creating inhibitory learning to counteract learned fears and aversions. Treatment usually involves positive reinforcement of food approach behavior and escape extinction/response prevention to eliminate food avoidant behavior. To shed light on the neural mechanisms that may maintain ARFID and to identify candidate pharmacological treatments for adjuncts to behavioral interventions, this paper systematically reviews research on drug treatments that successfully reduce conditioned taste aversions (CTA) in animal models by disrupting reconsolidation or promoting extinction. The mechanism of action of these treatments, brain areas involved, and whether these CTA findings have been used to understand human eating behavior are assessed. Collectively, the results provide insight into possible neural mechanisms associated with resuming oral intake following CTA akin to the therapeutic goals of ARFID treatment and suggest that CTA animal models hold promise to facilitate the development of interventions to prevent feeding problems. The findings also reveal the need to investigate CTA reduction in juvenile and female animals and show that CTA is rarely studied to understand disordered human feeding even though CTA has been observed in humans and parallels many of the characteristics of rodent CTA. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Increasing the uptake of plant-based diets: An analysis of the impact of a CO2 food label.
- Author
-
Maier, Maiken
- Subjects
FOOD labeling ,PLANT-based diet ,CARBON dioxide ,LABELING theory ,NUTRITION policy ,FOOD habits - Abstract
Reducing the environmental footprint of the global food system significantly depends on shifting to more plant-based diets. However, deep-rooted eating habits and a general lack of awareness about food-related emissions hinder large-scale dietary shifts. Demand-side food policies can accelerate this transition towards plant-based diets. One policy instrument that may increase awareness of diet-related emissions and facilitate climate-friendly food consumption choices is a CO2 food label. The success of such demand-side food policies depends on socio-political and market acceptance. However, there is a lack of empirical evidence regarding the socio-political (i.e., feasibility) and market acceptance (i.e., effectiveness at changing behavioral intentions) of CO2 food labels. We also require more knowledge about the potential spillover effects of CO2 food labels on support for more ambitious demand-side food policies. The paper presents evidence from a survey experiment with a sample of Swiss residents (N = 2372) who were randomly provided with information about an established CO2 food label. The survey experiment was embedded in a cooperation throughout a larger long-term project with the second-largest Swiss retailer, which launched one of the world's first CO2 food labels in 2021. Findings show that providing information on a CO2 food label strengthens individuals' behavioral change intentions and support for a mandatory governmental CO2 food label. However, no spillover effect on support for other food policy instruments is identified, which also means that the study finds no crowding out effect by voluntary CO2 labelling initiatives on the support of governmental food policy measures. The results imply that a CO2 food label enjoys high market and socio-political acceptance. • Information on a CO2 label strengthens attitudes and behavioral change intentions. • Information on a CO2 label strengthens support for mandatory CO2 food labels. • A CO2 label enjoys high market and socio-political acceptance. • There is no spillover effect on the support of other more stringent food policies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Interpreting habits in a new place: Migrants' descriptions of geophagia during pregnancy.
- Author
-
Hunter-Adams, Jo
- Subjects
- *
GEOPHAGY , *FOOD habits , *PREGNANT women , *INTESTINAL infections , *PUBLIC health , *THERAPEUTICS , *DIET & psychology , *PREGNANCY & psychology , *PICA (Pathology) , *ALUMINUM silicates , *DESIRE , *FOCUS groups , *HABIT , *PSYCHOLOGY of immigrants , *NOMADS , *SOILS , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Background and Introduction: Previous studies of soil eating, or geophagia, among pregnant women in sub-Saharan Africa indicate the practice is widespread. Various explanations have been explored to explain the global phenomenon of soil eating, with the most compelling explanation focused on clay's ability to prevent or treat intestinal infection. The urban South African context for clay eating is not well understood. This paper explores clay consumption amongst pregnant migrants who are nationals of countries where clay consumption may be common.Methods: I conducted in-depth interviews with a purposively selected group of Somali, Congolese, and Zimbabwean women (n = 23). Interviews included questions broadly related to maternal and infant nutrition. In addition, I conducted nine focus group discussions (n = 48) with adult Somali, Congolese (DRC), and Zimbabwean men (N = 3) and women (N = 6), segregated by country of origin and gender. This paper focuses specifically on responses related to geophagia.Results: While Somali women did not report consuming clay or charcoal, Congolese and Zimbabwean participants self-reported commonly consuming clay during pregnancy, and at times also when not pregnant. Despite having heard public health messaging that discouraged the practice, participants largely did not describe this consumption in terms of health, but rather in terms of craving and habit. Participants described continued consumption of clay in South Africa, and the only reason for ceasing consumption was in cases of severe constipation.Discussion: The widespread consumption of clay soil by Congolese and Zimbabwean women during pregnancy may be a mechanism through which identity was reasserted and reproduced in a foreign country. Participants' emphasis on clay consumption seemed related to the absence or expense of other craved foods, and perhaps also to feelings of loss in Cape Town. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Reframing convenience food.
- Author
-
Jackson, Peter and Viehoff, Valerie
- Subjects
- *
CONVENIENCE foods , *FOOD consumption , *PUBLIC health , *SUSTAINABILITY , *FOOD habits , *FOOD industry , *CUSTOMER satisfaction , *COOKING , *DECISION making , *FOOD preferences - Abstract
This paper provides a critical review of recent research on the consumption of 'convenience' food, highlighting the contested nature of the term and exploring its implications for public health and environmental sustainability. It distinguishes between convenience food in general and particular types of convenience food, such as ready-meals, tracing the structure and growth of the market for such foods with a particular emphasis on the UK which currently has the highest rate of ready-meal consumption in Europe. Having established the definitional complexities of the term, the paper presents the evidence from a systematic review of the literature, highlighting the significance of convenience food in time-saving and time-shifting, the importance of recent changes in domestic labour and family life, and the way the consumption of convenience food is frequently moralized. The paper shows how current debates about convenience food are part of a longer discursive history about food, health and nutrition. It discusses current levels of public understanding about the links between convenience food, environmental sustainability and food waste. The paper concludes by making a case for understanding the consumption of convenience food in terms of everyday social practices, emphasising its habitual and routine character. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Right sizing prevention. Food portion size effects on children's eating and weight.
- Author
-
Birch, Leann L., Savage, Jennifer S., and Fisher, Jennifer Orlet
- Subjects
- *
FOOD portions , *FOOD habits , *BODY weight , *CALORIC content of foods , *CHILD nutrition - Abstract
Experimental findings provide consistent evidence that increasing the portion size of palatable, energy dense entrees relative to an age appropriate reference portion increases children's energy intake of the entree and the meal. Most of these studies have been conducted on preschool aged children between 2 and 6 years of age, in childcare or laboratory settings, using repeated measures designs. In these studies, children's intake is compared across a series of meals, where the size of the entrée portion is varied and other aspects of the meal, including the portion size of other items on the menu, are held constant. This paper provides an overview of what we know from this research, what is not known about the effects of portion size on children's intake and weight status, and points to some of the important unanswered questions and gaps in the literature. Lastly, we discuss how individual characteristics may make someone more or less susceptible to large portions of foods and how the palatability of foods may moderate observed associations among portion size, children's intake, and weight status. Future studies that address the gaps identified in this paper are needed to inform policy and to develop effective and efficient interventions to prevent childhood obesity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. The evolving content of meals in Great Britain. Results of a survey in 2012 in comparison with the 1950s.
- Author
-
Yates, Luke and Warde, Alan
- Subjects
- *
FOOD consumption , *FOOD habits , *COMPUTER surveys , *SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors , *COMPARATIVE studies - Abstract
This paper examines food eaten at meals in Great Britain. It presents findings about contemporary meal content, reflecting on the relationship between meal content and occasion, and makes comparison with an earlier study. Drawing on an online survey (N = 2784), conducted in September 2012, it describes the food consumed at daily eating events in terms of content, volume and complexity, common components and combinations, and sequence. Socio-demographic and economic differences are examined. Conceptual tools for analysing the association between food content and meal occasions are refined. The paper first explores the regularity of meal patterns. This is followed by description of the contours of the three principal daily eating events, with a brief section on snacks. The paper interprets distinctive features of current patterns by way of comparison with a similar study of eating habits in the 1950s. Findings reveal morning and midday eating events as simple and homogeneous in content, particularly on weekdays, with respondents breakfasting on cereal or toast, and lunching on sandwiches. Evening meals are more complex, structured and varied in content. Common patterns and systematic differentiation can be discerned, particularly across age cohort. Significant historical change can also be observed in relation to meal content and, to a lesser extent, meal pattern. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Disordered eating practices in gastrointestinal disorders.
- Author
-
Satherley, R., Howard, R., and Higgs, S.
- Subjects
- *
FOOD habits , *GASTROINTESTINAL diseases , *DIETARY supplements , *DATABASES , *MEDLINE , *SYSTEMATIC reviews - Abstract
Purpose: To systematically review evidence concerning disordered eating practices in dietary-controlled gastrointestinal conditions. Three key questions were examined: a) are disordered eating practices a feature of GI disorders?; b) what abnormal eating practices are present in those with GI disorders?; and c) what factors are associated with the presence of disordered eating in those with GI disorders? By exploring these questions, we aim to develop a conceptual model of disordered eating development in GI disease. Methods: Five key databases, Web of Science with Conference Proceedings (1900–2014) and MEDLINE (1950–2014), PubMed, PsycINFO (1967–2014) and Google Scholar, were searched for papers relating to disordered eating practices in those with GI disorders. All papers were quality assessed before being included in the review. Results: Nine papers were included in the review. The majority of papers reported that the prevalence of disordered eating behaviours is greater in populations with GI disorders than in populations of healthy controls. Disordered eating patterns in dietary-controlled GI disorders may be associated with both anxiety and GI symptoms. Evidence concerning the correlates of disordered eating was limited. Conclusions: The presence of disordered eating behaviours is greater in populations with GI disorders than in populations of healthy controls, but the direction of the relationship is not clear. Implications for further research are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Hybridizing food cultures in computer-mediated environments: Creativity and improvisation in Greek food blogs.
- Author
-
Lee, Soo Hee, Samdanis, Marios, and Gkiousou, Sofia
- Subjects
- *
TELEMATICS , *HUMAN-computer interaction , *FOOD habits , *BLOGS , *CREATIVE ability - Abstract
Abstract: This paper focuses on the ways in which food blogs influence the evolution of food cultures in computer-mediated environments. Food blogs provide a unique setting in which to study individual creativity and improvisation, as they make everyday food practices visible, pubic and transmittable. This paper proposes a cultural framework of human–computer interaction (HCI) and applies it to the context of food blogging. It stresses the effects of remediation on hybridisation of disciplines, roles and practices, which in turn lead to individual creative practices in the form of bricolage. Three case studies of Greek food blogs abroad are analysed to illustrate the proposed framework and to develop research implications for human–food interaction (HFI). [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Temporal patterns of eating by mode of data collection from the baseline dietary intakes of participants in the Healthy Diet and Lifestyle Study.
- Author
-
Yonemori, Kim M., Zuccarelli, Lorelei, Le Marchand, Loic, Zhu, Fengqing M., Kerr, Deborah, and Boushey, Carol J.
- Subjects
- *
FOOD consumption , *FOOD habits , *FOOD diaries , *ACQUISITION of data , *INGESTION , *DIET - Abstract
• Image-based dietary records compared to traditional hand written records. • Frequency of eating did not differ between the two assessment methods. • Temporal eating occasions were widely different between the assessment methods. • For the traditional method most foods were recorded at an hour or half hour. • For the image-based method most foods had no discernable temporal pattern. • Temporal eating occasions may be more diverse than previously recognized. Scientific interest in temporal patterns of eating has grown in recent years. The objective of this paper was to examine differences in frequency of eating and temporal patterns associated with time of eating among participants using a mobile food record (mFR) and those using a paper-based dietary record (DR). The Healthy Diet and Lifestyle Study was a two-arm randomized pilot trial to reduce visceral adiposity in East Asian middle-aged adults (35–55 y). Dietary intakes were collected over four days prior to the start of an intervention. This analysis examined differences in time and frequency of eating between matched groups using the mFR (n = 5) compared to the DR (n = 5). For those completing the DR, 94 % of the 101 self-reported eating occasions were recorded as occurring on the quarter hour, i.e., :00, :15, :30, :45. For the mFR match, only eight of the 92 eating occasions were recorded at any quarter hour. Among all of the 55 mFR users, only 7 % of the 1,177 eating occasions were recorded on a quarter hour. Frequency of eating did not differ between groups. Distribution of eating occasions among those using images was asymmetrical, supporting the concept of temporal eating occasions being widely distributed across 24 h. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. “Eat like a man”. A social constructionist analysis of the role of food in men’s lives
- Author
-
Newcombe, Mark A., McCarthy, Mary B., Cronin, James M., and McCarthy, Sinéad N.
- Subjects
- *
FOOD habits , *SOCIAL psychology , *HUMAN behavior , *INGESTION , *EMPIRICAL research , *SOCIOCULTURAL factors - Abstract
Abstract: This paper adopts a social constructionist approach to investigate the role of food in the production of identities and social experiences for men. With recognition that relational and experiential processes are central to men’s lives, the purpose of the paper is to inductively explore the personal and interpersonal complexities of this group’s food related behaviours. Empirical data were collected through a series of semi-structured interviews with 33 men, comprising of 4 age groups, (18–35, 36–54, 55–64, and 65+ years). Regardless of age, an analysis and interpretation yielded three emergent themes, food as a component of: (1) role-play; (2) contextual interactions, (3) and the management of a functional vs. hedonic dialectic. Across these themes various tensions and contradictions emerged suggesting a complex reflexivity to male food life experiences. Relational issues emerged such as the observation that some men concede control to their partners throughout their food experiences. Overall, our men’s consumption practices construct a specific socio-cultural articulation of masculine roles whereby their internal paradoxes are leveraged as a means to produce desirable experiences and self-identifications. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Pork politics: The scales of home-made food in Eastern Poland.
- Author
-
Mroczkowska, Dr Joanna
- Subjects
- *
COOKING with pork , *FOOD habits , *FOOD consumption , *FOOD & politics - Abstract
This paper examines how food practices and food narratives become tools of community building. It explores the politics of pork consumption and production in Eastern Poland, as embedded and enacted at various scales: homestead, family, gender relations, regional and national affinity as well as in EU and national levels. I draw on ethnographic research among the farming communities, where foodways are tied to ideas of home, work and locality. I find that pork politics takes on numerous forms there: discursive, as visible in the narratives of the symbolic value of pork to mark farmers' way of life; and performative and pragmatic, as visible in the practices of subsistence farming that immerse farmers' lives in food. I argue that all forms point to a creative response to being pushed into the "grey zone" of the state. Due to legislative and political obstacles, small-scale farmers in Eastern Poland withdraw into private sphere and barter, engage in informal food practices and take on ways of life associated with the past. In trying to uphold their status and moral worth, farmers retreat from official farming strategies, reject the values of modernity, equality and development as set out by the EU and become detached from the consumers. I propose that in the homesteads of Eastern Poland, functioning on the "borderland" of the state does not entail being excluded from politics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Nurturing Children's Healthy Eating: Position statement.
- Author
-
Haines, Jess, Haycraft, Emma, Lytle, Leslie, Nicklaus, Sophie, Kok, Frans J., Merdji, Mohamed, Fisberg, Mauro, Moreno, Luis A., Goulet, Olivier, and Hughes, Sheryl O.
- Subjects
- *
CHILD nutrition , *CHILDREN'S health , *PUBLIC health , *FOOD habits , *FOOD presentation - Abstract
The relationship between eating a healthy diet and positive health outcomes is well known; nurturing healthy eating among children therefore has the potential to improve public health. A healthy diet occurs when one's usual eating patterns include adequate nutrient intake and sufficient, but not excessive, energy intake to meet the energy needs of the individual. However, many parents struggle to establish healthy eating patterns in their children due to the pressures of modern life. Moreover, healthcare providers often do not have the time or the guidance they need to empower parents to establish healthy eating practices in their children. Based on existing evidence from epidemiologic and intervention research, the Nurturing Children's Healthy Eating collaboration, established by Danone Institute International, has identified four key themes that encourage and support healthy eating practices among children in the modern Western world. The first - positive parental feeding - explores how parenting practices and styles, such as avoiding food restriction, allowing children to make their own food choices, and encouraging children to self-limit their portion sizes, can influence children's dietary intake. The second - eating together - highlights the link between eating socialization through regular family meals and healthful diet among children. The third - a healthy home food environment - explores the impact on eating practices of family resources, food availability/accessibility, parental modeling, and cues for eating. The fourth - the pleasure of eating - associates children's healthy eating with pleasure through repeated exposure to healthful foods, enjoyable social meals, and enhancement of the cognitive qualities (e.g. thoughts or ideas) of healthful foods. This paper reviews the evidence leading to the characterization of these nurturing themes, and ways in which recommendations might be implemented in the home. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Stigma control model of dysregulated eating: A momentary maintenance model of dysregulated eating among marginalized/stigmatized individuals.
- Author
-
Mason, Tyler B., Smith, Kathryn E., and Lavender, Jason M.
- Subjects
- *
SOCIAL stigma , *EATING disorders , *PSYCHOLOGICAL distress , *LIABILITY for emotional distress , *FOOD habits - Abstract
Stigma is a factor commonly experienced by marginalized groups that may serve as a maintenance factor for dysregulated eating. In the current paper, we propose a momentary maintenance model, grounded in previous theoretical and empirical research, termed the stigma control model of dysregulated eating. Our model proposes that momentary experiences of stigma lead to emotional distress, which in turn is associated with engagement in numerous maladaptive stigma management strategies intended to curb future stigma. These stigma management strategies, however, serve to increase emotional distress, which in turn promotes dysregulated eating. This model has applications for understanding the maintenance of dysregulated eating among marginalized groups, as well as implications for developing novel treatments and refining existing treatments for dysregulated eating. Future studies should use methods that capture momentary experiences to evaluate the proposed stigma control model of dysregulated eating. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Favouring more rigour when investigating human eating behaviour is like supporting motherhood and apple pie: A response to Robinson, Bevelander, Field, and Jones (2018).
- Author
-
Hetherington, Marion M. and Rolls, Barbara J.
- Subjects
- *
EATING disorders , *FOOD consumption , *FOOD laboratories , *HYPOTHESIS , *INGESTION , *PATIENTS , *FOOD habits - Abstract
In a 1987 paper, addressing questions about factors that influence the initiation, maintenance, and termination of food intake, we wrote, "development of systematic procedures to measure eating behaviour is essential if descriptive and inferential statistics are to be applied to answering such questions, giving them power and replicability" (Hetherington & Rolls, 1987 page 77). Therefore, as longstanding advocates of rigorous procedures in laboratory-based investigations of food intake, we welcome Robinson et al.'s (2018) clear recommendations for laboratory studies. However, this is akin to voting for "motherhood and apple pie", and few would argue against deployment of improved procedures for these studies. What then can we contribute to the debate in order to refine the recommendations made or add to them? Our most important message for researchers is that the central hypothesis or main research question will determine the most appropriate methods for any study. If a laboratory-based study is planned, then there are basic methodological questions that must be answered before proceeding to a final protocol. While such guidelines are needed to ensure basic methodological rigour, these should not be so prescriptive as to inhibit creativity. Here we provide several thoughts on how to advance studies of ingestive behaviour, including the need to apply appropriate controls, encouragement to move beyond convenience samples, and to remember the value of exploratory, observational, and naturalistic studies to complement laboratory-based studies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. A qualitative exploration into momentary impacts on food parenting practices among parents of pre-school aged children.
- Author
-
Loth, Katie A., Uy, Marc, Neumark-Sztainer, Dianne, Fisher, Jennifer Orlet, and Berge, Jerica M.
- Subjects
- *
PARENTING & psychology , *FOOD habits , *CHILD psychology , *ECOLOGICAL momentary assessments (Clinical psychology) , *PARENTERAL feeding , *FOOD consumption - Abstract
Food parenting practices have been identified as a potentially significant correlate of weight status and weight-related behaviors in children. The extent to which food parenting practices fluctuate across time and context is not well known. In particular, situational factors are thought to shape the types of food parenting practices used in the moment, but the nature of those factors remain unclear. In this paper data from interviews with parents (n = 40) of preschoolers was used to: 1) describe parents' day-to-day lived experiences of food parenting within the broad theoretical domains of coercive control, structure and autonomy support; 2) identify salient momentary factors that influence use of these food parenting practices; and 3) understand how these momentary factors impact the use of different types of food parenting practices. The feeding practices described by parents align well with the three overarching themes described within the literature: coercive control, autonomy support, and structure. Parents described using a combination of practices from within each of these domains; they also indicated that their feeding practices were easily influenced by momentary factors that impacted their food parenting within and across eating occasions. For the most part, parents described momentary factors (e.g. schedule changes, parental stress, child behavior) that shifted them away from structure and autonomy support feeding practices, towards indulgent and coercive feeding practices. Researchers should be aware of the likely interplay between different types of feeding practices as well as the potential that momentary factors may shift parents from one type of practice towards another. The use of novel data collection methods, such as ecological momentary assessment, that allow for exploration of food parenting practices as dynamic, rather than static, behaviors should be explored. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Cutting through conflicting prescriptions: How guidelines inform "healthy and sustainable" diets in Switzerland.
- Author
-
Godin, Laurence and Sahakian, Marlyne
- Subjects
- *
FOOD consumption , *VEGETARIANISM , *MEDICAL prescriptions , *FOOD habits , *SUSTAINABILITY - Abstract
This paper takes as a starting point "food consumption prescriptions", or guidelines on what and how one should eat when it comes to "healthy and sustainable diets". Through qualitative research in Switzerland, involving discourse analysis, observations, in-depth interviews, and focus groups, we set out to uncover the more dominant prescriptions put forward by a variety of actors, how consumers represent these prescriptions, as well as overlaps and tensions between them. The notion of a "balanced meal" is the more prominent prescription, along with the idea that food and eating should be "pleasurable". Guidelines towards eating local and seasonal products overlap with organic and natural food consumption, while prescriptions to eat less meat of higher quality are in tension with prescriptions around vegetarian and vegan diets. We then consider how prescriptions play out in daily life, as both a resource and obstacle towards the establishment of eating habits, and what dimensions of everyday life have the most influence on how certain prescriptions are enacted - contributing to conceptual deliberations on food in relation to social practices. Time, mobility, and the relationships built around food and eating are forces to be reckoned with when considering possible transitions towards the normative goal of "healthier and more sustainable diets". [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. "It's always on the safe list": Investigating experiential accounts of picky eating adults.
- Author
-
Fox, Gemma, Coulthard, Helen, Williamson, Iain, and Wallis, Debbie
- Subjects
- *
FOOD habits , *FOOD consumption , *DATA analysis , *EATING disorders , *TREATMENT of eating disorders , *DISEASE risk factors , *FOOD fussiness , *DIET , *FOOD preferences - Abstract
Previous research into severely restricted eating for reasons which are not cultural, medical, due to a lack of food or due to concerns about body image has focused predominantly on "picky/fussy eating" in children. Despite evidence that picky eating does continue into adulthood and recognition in the new diagnostic category Avoidant Restrictive Food Intake Disorder (ARFID) that problematically avoidant and restrictive patterns of eating affect people across the lifespan, relatively little is known about the challenges and consequences faced by older adolescents and adults. This research employs qualitative methods to explore the experience of living as an adult with picky eating behaviours. Semi-structured interviews were undertaken with thirteen adults who identify as picky eaters and eat a highly limited diet, as determined by a checklist food questionnaire. Data were analysed using interpretative phenomenological analysis (IPA). Two themes are presented in this paper: "Constructions of food" and "Motivators for and barriers to change". These themes show the importance of how individuals perceive food, their diet and themselves, and implications for clinical practice and future research in light of these findings are considered. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Commentary on: "What is restrained eating and how do we identify it?": Unveiling the elephant in the room.
- Author
-
Lowe, Michael R.
- Subjects
- *
FOOD habits , *COMPULSIVE eating , *REDUCING diets , *AFFECT (Psychology) , *BINGE-eating disorder , *INGESTION , *HYPERPHAGIA , *BULIMIA - Abstract
This paper is a commentary on Polivy, Herman and Mills' (2020) article, entitled "What is restrained eating and how do we identify it?". Polivy et al.'s paper makes a useful contribution by providing guidelines to researchers for choosing the most appropriate measure of restraint for their research questions. However, the authors assume that restrained eating can be appropriately conceptualized as a trait, an assumption I question. They also assume that restrained eating has a causal influence on the outcomes (e.g., counterregulatory eating, negative affect eating, binge eating) with which it has been associated, which I also question. Finally, they ignored a second prominent model for conceptualizing dieting behavior, the Three-Factor Model of Dieting. The Three-Factor Model decomposes the construct of restrained eating into two types of dieting (current weight loss dieting and weight suppression) that do appear to be causally related to eating control and one type (restrained eating to avoid excessive consumption) that modulates likelihood of overeating but does not cause it. I conclude by noting that scientific progress is best served by promoting, not avoiding, discussion and debate about a multiplicity of perspectives on topics of interest, especially when incompatible hypotheses and data exist on such topics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Healthy eating: Perceptions and practice (the ASH30 study)
- Author
-
Lake, Amelia A., Hyland, Robert M., Rugg-Gunn, Andrew J., Wood, Charlotte E., Mathers, John C., and Adamson, Ashley J.
- Subjects
- *
FOOD habits , *INGESTION , *ANTHROPOMETRY , *DIET , *FOOD - Abstract
Abstract: Perceptions of healthy eating may influence food intake. Anthropometric and dietary data were collected from 197 respondents (average age 32.5 years: 2000/2001) in Northumberland (78%) and elsewhere in the UK (22%). A questionnaire and two 3-day food diaries were completed. Foods consumed were assigned to one of five food categories from The Balance of Good Health. This paper explores respondents’ concepts of ‘healthy eating’ and responses to the statement, ‘My eating patterns are healthy’ and compares responses with measured intakes for each of the five food categories. Fifty-three respondents disagreed, 62 neither agreed nor disagreed and 82 agreed with the statement. Intakes of foods containing fat and/or sugar, fruit and vegetables and meat, fish and alternatives were significantly different between the three response groups. The ‘agree’ group had the highest intake of fruit and vegetables and the lowest intake of foods containing fat and/or sugar and meat, fish and alternatives. A significantly higher proportion of individuals from the highest socio-economic group agreed with the statement. Significantly more individuals with Body Mass Indexes in the two lower quartiles agreed with the statement. This paper shows a relationship between perceptions of eating patterns and socio-economic status, adiposity and measured food intake. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Motivating operations in appetite research
- Author
-
Tapper, Katy
- Subjects
- *
NUTRITION & psychology , *APPETITE , *FOOD habits , *FOOD preferences - Abstract
Abstract: Appetite research frequently employs principles derived from behaviour analysis. However, it has yet to utilise the more recent theoretical advances in this field. This paper describes the concept of the motivating operation (MO)—a behaviour analytic formulation of motivation. An MO is an environmental event that (a) establishes or abolishes the reinforcing or punishing effect of another event and (b) evokes or abates behaviours associated with that event. The paper describes both unconditioned and conditioned MOs and the ways in which they may help account for a variety of eating behaviours. It then goes on to highlight the main ways in which the MO account differs from other theories of motivation employed in appetite research. These relate to (1) the ways in which they account for non-regulatory feeding, (2) the extent to which they address cognitive variables and (3) their underlying philosophical assumptions and subsequent relation to intervention. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. The Singaporean foodscape - Convenience, choice, entertainment, and sociality for young workers.
- Author
-
Leu, Jodie, Rebello, Salome A., Sargent, Ginny M., Kelly, Matthew, and Banwell, Cathy
- Subjects
- *
YOUNG workers , *SOCIAL media in marketing , *YOUNG adults , *FOOD courts , *RESTAURANTS , *FOOD habits - Abstract
Singapore is famous for its diverse, affordable, and exciting foodscape. This paper focuses on understanding the multifaceted role that the Singaporean food environment plays in working young adults' lives, and how young adults interact with this environment to make food choices. Using a focused ethnographic approach, including 33 semi-structured interviews and participant-observation, we explore the ways in which busy working young adults interact with the foodscape. The food environment provides young adults, who eat out frequently, with highly accessible food options that cater to their budgets and palates. They often dine at hawker centres and similar food establishments with colleagues, friends and family. These establishments offer accessible, affordable, and appealing food. Overall, the foodscape provides a source of popular entertainment through the exploration of diverse cuisines and novel shared social experiences. Young adults are heavy users of social media to maintain social networks and to explore the food environment. Capitalizing on this, food marketing on social media targets this group with the promotion of food-related experiences. While it may not always promote healthy eating, the Singaporean foodscape offers convenience, choice, entertainment, and sociality. In the process, it facilitates the formation of cultural and national identity and the protection of mental well-being through the maintenance and development of relationships, and a sense of belonging. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Proper meals in transition: young married couples on the nature of eating together
- Author
-
Marshall, D. W. and Anderson, A. S.
- Subjects
- *
FOOD habits , *FOOD preferences , *MARRIED people - Abstract
Most people get married or spend time living with a partner at some stage in their lives. But what effect does this change have, if any, on their eating habits? The transition from bachelor or spinster to young couple represents a major lifecourse change and this paper looks at the role that eating together plays in the lives of a group of young Scottish couples recently married or cohabiting with their partner. The key question here is what role do meals play in all of this and how are eating activities arranged in these households. In an attempt to move the debate on meals beyond the “traditional family unit” it considers what eating “properly” meant for these couples. The paper looks at the importance of the evening meal as a site for sociability in married and cohabiting couples and examines the process of social interaction, focusing on temporal and spatial aspects of eating together as a couple. It reports on what men and women said in individual interviews and recorded in personal food diaries, contrasting this with their behaviour when they were living separately from their partners. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. To keep or not to keep? Sorting out leftovers from a refrigerator.
- Author
-
Gojard, Séverine, Masson, Marine, Blumenthal, David, and Véron, Bérangère
- Subjects
- *
LEFTOVERS , *REFRIGERATED foods , *TELEVISION cooking programs , *REFUSE containers , *FOOD storage , *HABIT , *FOOD habits , *RESEARCH , *REFRIGERATION & refrigerating machinery , *WASTE management , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *EVALUATION research , *COMPARATIVE studies , *FOOD handling , *FOOD service - Abstract
Most literature on food waste shows that food that ends up in the garbage can is often no longer considered as enjoyable, or even as edible. In this paper, we decided to focus on assessments of whether leftover food is still considered as worth eating, to provide a better understanding of the production of domestic food waste. We constructed a pluridisciplinary approach, combining sensory analysis and sociology. The first part was conducted in a test kitchen under controlled conditions: 50 participants had to sort out and decide to keep or to throw away different types of refrigerated leftovers. The second part used in-depth interviews with half of these participants (N = 25) to explore their food habits and perceptions and handling of leftovers at home. The first section of the paper presents the theoretical framework of the study, which is grounded in practice theory. Then we detail the methodology and the results. We show that sorting out leftovers is a process mobilizing embodied knowledge and resulting from domestic practices implemented to avoid waste, such as storing or reusing leftovers. In the discussion, we analyze the sorting of refrigerated food products as a compound practice, situated at the intersection of provisioning, cooking, meal organization, and judgment of taste (Warde, 2013). Using this theoretical framework enables us to understand the heterogeneity observed in the outcome of the sorting process as the result of its weak degree of regulation. The sorting out practice is thus consistent with different modes of engagement such as food waste prevention, health maintenance, or providing enjoyable family meals. We conclude by providing suggestions of policy recommendations regarding domestic refrigeration, food storage, and assessment practices. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Validation of the revised Food Neophobia Scale (FNS-R) in the Italian context.
- Author
-
Guidetti, Margherita, Carraro, Luciana, Cavazza, Nicoletta, and Roccato, Michele
- Subjects
- *
NEOPHOBIA , *FOOD habits , *FOOD preferences , *STRUCTURAL equation modeling , *TEST validity - Abstract
Measuring individuals' level of food neophobia, i.e., the reluctance to eat novel food, is a critical task since it negatively affects diet variety and quality. Using structural equations models, the revised Food Neophobia Scale (FNS-R) was validated with a sample of 711 Italian adults. After deleting 4 items characterized by both low face validity and a suboptimal association with the other items, and after correcting statistically for the acquiescent response-set, the resulting 6-item, fully balanced FNS-R showed a good construct validity. Moreover, it showed the expected positive correlations with General Neophobia and with Disgust Sensitivity. Finally, it resulted invariant across participants' genders, age classes, and levels of education, and across methods of administration (paper-and-pencil and on-line). Strong points and possible developments of the study are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Quantity-based analysis of household food consumption patterns and drivers: The case of Israel.
- Author
-
Damari, Yuval and Kissinger, Meidad
- Subjects
- *
FOOD consumption , *HOUSEHOLDS , *NUTRITIONAL value , *SOCIAL groups , *FOOD habits - Abstract
The interest in better understanding the characteristics and drivers of food consumption by individuals and social groups has grown in recent years, because of various social, environmental, health and economic issues. Most analyses have focused either on the macro or national scale, using food balance/disappearance data, or on the micro scale, focusing on nutrition analysis in limited groups of individual consumers. While various household characteristics are expected to influence food-purchasing habits, the scope and methodology of most previous studies limited their ability to relate to multiple factors, and integrate all into specific consumption patterns. A third, mezzo approach focuses on analyzing household food purchasing, mostly using expenditure surveys. However, focusing on the value spent may result in different quantities of food purchased. This paper aims capturing the amount of food purchased by Israeli households and to analyze the socio-economic factors shaping that consumption. It joins limited number of studies worldwide that focused on the quantity purchased, and the first such analysis of household food purchasing in the State of Israel. It quantified food purchased by more than 30,000 households, and analyzed key shaping factors e.g., income, household size and age. It first, established the need for quantity based analysis. Then, an extensive breakdown of consumed food is presented and the unique diets of different parts of the society were identified. Finally, it examined the consumption of different lifestyles to find that couples lifestyles tend to consume more per capita, and that income has a crucial role in determining the rate of consumption both in terms of quantity and variety purchased. However it highlights that other variables should also be examined in order to assess properly why households consume the way they do. Nevertheless, the findings of this research can be used as the basis for examining the health, social, or environmental implications of the different identified food consumption habits, support long-term research that examines changes over time, and may be the basis for examining the potential benefits of implementing specific policies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Family meals among parents: Associations with nutritional, social and emotional wellbeing.
- Author
-
Utter, Jennifer, Larson, Nicole, Berge, Jerica M., Eisenberg, Marla E., Fulkerson, Jayne A., and Neumark-Sztainer, Dianne
- Subjects
- *
PARENT-child relationships , *FAMILY meals , *CHILD development , *CHILD psychology , *CHILD nutrition , *QUALITY of life , *FAMILIES , *FOOD habits , *MENTAL health , *PSYCHOLOGY of parents , *PSYCHOLOGICAL tests , *RESEARCH funding , *SELF-perception , *SOCIAL participation , *FAMILY relations , *NUTRITIONAL status - Abstract
A growing body of research suggests that children and adolescents who share frequent meals with their families report better nutrition indicators, family relationships and mental health. Yet, little research has examined whether parents who share meals with their families report the same indicators of wellbeing. The current paper addresses this question using population-based survey data and a sample of parents in the United States (n = 889, mean age 31 years) that responded to the fourth wave of the Project EAT study in 2015-16. Multiple regression models were used to examine associations between frequency of family meals and indicators of nutritional, social and emotional wellbeing, controlling for demographic and household characteristics. Analyses also examined if associations were moderated by sex, as mothers tend to be more responsible for household and childcare tasks. Results suggested that parent report of frequent family meals was associated with higher levels of family functioning, greater self-esteem, and lower levels of depressive symptoms and stress (p-value for all <0.001). Frequency of family meals was also related to greater fruit and vegetable consumption (both p < 0.05), but was unrelated to other indicators of parent body size and nutritional wellbeing. Associations between frequency of family meals and parent wellbeing were similar for both mothers and fathers. Findings from the current study suggest that frequent family meals may contribute to the social and emotional wellbeing of parents. Future strategies to promote family meals should consider the potential impacts on the health and wellbeing of the whole family. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. A literature scoping review of eating practices and food environments in 1 and 2-person households in the UK, Australia and USA.
- Author
-
Breen, Fidelma, Coveney, John, and Pflaum, Carol Anne Hartwick
- Subjects
- *
FOOD habits , *FOOD quality , *HOUSEHOLDS , *NUTRITIONAL value , *COMMENSALISM - Abstract
The purpose of this article is to map the data currently available on the subject of eating practices and food environments in small (i.e. one- and two-person) households. Specifically, the enquiry is focused on commensality; the act of eating together. Research dates from the late 1980s, however, there are few recent publications on this subject. Searching Ovid MEDLINE, PsycINFO, CINAHL, Web of Science, Scopus, ProQuest and Google Scholar, 2949 papers were found, but only 457 discussed any element of the research questions. These were further distilled to a count of 117, by abstract reading to 53 at which point, quality, location and study focus eliminated a further 34 articles leaving 19 articles. After full reading, it was clear that only seven of these focused on the research question in detail and these are marked as four-star articles by bold text. The 19 articles are analysed for quality and their aspects of relevance to the central research question is discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. A process and outcome evaluation of an in-class vegetable promotion program.
- Author
-
Myers, Gael, Wright, Shannon, Blane, Sally, Pratt, Iain S., and Pettigrew, Simone
- Subjects
- *
VEGETABLES -- Nutrition , *CHILD nutrition , *FOOD consumption , *FOOD habits , *SCHOOL health services , *EVALUATION of medical care , *HEALTH education , *RESEARCH , *VEGETABLES , *EVALUATION of human services programs , *RESEARCH methodology , *DIET , *CHILD behavior , *CURRICULUM , *EVALUATION research , *MEDICAL cooperation , *SICKNESS Impact Profile , *FOOD preferences , *SELF-efficacy , *COMPARATIVE studies , *SCHOOLS , *HEALTH behavior , *STUDENTS , *FRUIT , *HEALTH attitudes , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *HEALTH promotion - Abstract
Objective: Nutrition interventions that target both fruits and vegetables are effective in increasing fruit consumption, but have been limited in their ability to improve vegetable intake. To address the low proportion of children meeting vegetable intake guidelines, approaches specifically targeting vegetables are needed. This paper reports on a mixed-method analysis of a 10-week vegetable promotion pilot project that aimed to increase vegetable intake as part of the existing Crunch&Sip in-class fruit and vegetable break program.Design: The intervention was designed to promote vegetable consumption through the implementation of vegetable-focused resources, including curriculum resources and parent education materials. Teachers completed pre- and end-of-intervention surveys. Process measures related to the use of resources and teachers' perceptions of barriers to implementation. The outcome evaluation included measures of children's vegetable consumption during Crunch&Sip breaks and teachers' attitudes and confidence relating to educating students about the benefits of consuming vegetables.Subjects: Twenty-one Western Australian primary schools already participating in the Crunch&Sip program participated in the pilot intervention and evaluation. Coverage included 35 primary school teachers representing 818 students aged 4-11 years.Results: The proportion of children bringing vegetables for Crunch&Sip more than doubled over the 10-week intervention (21% vs 46%; p < 0.001). Improvements were observed in teachers' perceived knowledge about the nutritional benefits of vegetables (p = 0.001) and confidence to educate students about the benefits of vegetable consumption (p = 0.028).Conclusions: Preferentially promoting vegetable consumption as part of an existing school-based nutrition program may be an effective strategy to increase children's vegetable intake. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Influence of oral processing on appetite and food intake - A systematic review and meta-analysis.
- Author
-
Krop, Emma M., Hetherington, Marion M., Nekitsing, Chandani, Miquel, Sophie, Postelnicu, Luminita, and Sarkar, Anwesha
- Subjects
- *
APPETITE , *FOOD habits , *MASTICATION , *STIMULUS satiation , *META-analysis - Abstract
Food delivers energy, nutrients and a pleasurable experience. Slow eating and prolonged oro-sensory exposure to food during consumption can enhance the processes that promote satiation. This systematic review and meta-analysis investigated the effects of oral processing on subjective measures of appetite (hunger, desire to eat) and objectively measured food intake. The aim was to investigate the influence of oral processing characteristics, specifically "chewing" and "lubrication", on "appetite" and "food intake". A literature search of six databases (Cochrane library, PubMed, Medline, Food Science and Technology Abstracts, Web of Science, Scopus), yielded 12161 articles which were reduced to a set of 40 articles using pre-specified inclusion and exclusion criteria. A further two articles were excluded from the meta-analysis due to missing relevant data. From the remaining 38 papers, detailing 40 unique studies with 70 subgroups, raw data were extracted for meta-analysis (food intake n = 65, hunger n = 22 and desire to eat ratings n = 15) and analyzed using random effects modelling. Oral processing parameters, such as number of chews, eating rate and texture manipulation, appeared to influence food intake markedly but appetite ratings to a lesser extent. Meta-analysis confirmed a significant effect of the direct and indirect aspects of oral processing that were related to chewing on both self-reported hunger (-0.20 effect size, 95% confidence interval CI: -0.30, -0.11), and food intake (-0.28 effect size, 95% CI: -0.36, -0.19). Although lubrication is an important aspect of oral processing, few studies on its effects on appetite have been conducted. Future experiments using standardized approaches should provide a clearer understanding of the role of oral processing, including both chewing and lubrication, in promoting satiety. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. How to bridge the intention-behavior gap in food parenting: Automatic constructs and underlying techniques.
- Author
-
Larsen, Junilla K., Hermans, Roel C.J., Sleddens, Ester F.C., Vink, Jacqueline M., Kremers, Stef P.J., Ruiter, Emilie L.M., and Fisher, Jennifer O.
- Subjects
- *
FOOD preferences in children , *PARENTING , *PREVENTION of childhood obesity , *FOOD habits , *INTENTION , *DIET & psychology , *AUTONOMY (Psychology) , *CHILD behavior , *HEALTH behavior , *PARENT-child relationships , *PSYCHOLOGY of parents , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *SNACK foods - Abstract
Although parents often report positive intentions to promote and create a healthy food environment for their children (e.g., setting limits to snacks offered), they also experience difficulties in translating these intentions into actual behaviors. In this position paper, we argue that automatic processes explain an important part of the gap between parents' intentions and their actual food parenting behaviors. We provide a conceptual framework in which we hypothesize that automatic effects on food parenting occur through two key interrelated constructs: habits (key outcome construct) and volitional regulation behaviors (key mediating construct). Moreover, we discuss potentially important impulse-focused techniques that may directly change habits (e.g., nudging; inhibitory control training) or indirectly through volitional regulation behaviors (e.g., implementation intentions; mental contrasting). We make use of the literature on the role of intention-behavior discordance in general health behaviors and discuss implications for food parenting practices. Our framework provides a dual process view towards food parenting and may help to explain when and why parents are likely to engage in (un)healthy food parenting behaviors. In addition, this framework may hopefully stimulate research on (combinations of old and) new techniques to promote good food parenting behaviors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Effects of healthcare professional delivered early feeding interventions on feeding practices and dietary intake: A systematic review.
- Author
-
Matvienko-Sikar, Karen, Toomey, Elaine, Delaney, Lisa, Harrington, Janas, Byrne, Molly, Kearney, Patricia M., and Choosing Healthy Eating for Infant Health (CHErIsH) study team
- Subjects
- *
PREVENTION of childhood obesity , *FOOD habits , *BABY foods , *MEDICAL personnel , *SYSTEMATIC reviews , *PREVENTION of obesity , *BODY weight , *DIET , *PARENTING - Abstract
Background: Childhood obesity is a global public health challenge. Parental feeding practices, such as responsive feeding, are implicated in the etiology of childhood obesity.Purpose: This systematic review aimed to examine of effects of healthcare professional-delivered early feeding interventions, on parental feeding practices, dietary intake, and weight outcomes for children up to 2 years. The role of responsive feeding interventions was also specifically examined.Methods: Databases searched included: CINAHL, the Cochrane Library, EMBASE, Medline, PubMed, PsycINFO, and Maternity and Infant Care.Inclusion Criteria: participants are parents of children ≤2 years; intervention includes focus on early child feeding to prevent overweight and obesity; intervention delivered by healthcare professionals.Results: Sixteen papers, representing 10 trials, met inclusion criteria for review. Six interventions included responsive feeding components. Interventions demonstrated inconsistent effects on feeding practices, dietary intake, and weight outcomes. Findings suggest some reductions in pressure to eat and infant consumption of non-core beverages. Responsive feeding based interventions demonstrate greater improvements in feeding approaches, and weight outcomes.Conclusions: The findings of this review highlight the importance of incorporating responsive feeding in healthcare professional delivered early feeding interventions to prevent childhood obesity. Observed inconsistencies across trials may be explained by methodological limitations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Choosing a healthy and sustainable diet: A three-level approach for understanding the drivers of the Italians' dietary regime over time.
- Author
-
Benedetti, Ilaria, Laureti, Tiziana, and Secondi, Luca
- Subjects
- *
FOOD habits , *FOOD production , *SOCIAL status , *MEDITERRANEAN diet , *FOOD consumption , *ITALIANS , *LIFESTYLES , *CROSS-sectional method , *FOOD preferences , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *HEALTH behavior , *DECISION making , *EXERCISE , *PATIENT compliance , *HEALTH promotion - Abstract
Dietary patterns play key roles in health promotion and in preserving the environment. A growing number of studies show the importance of individual factors on food consumption choices, such as socio-economic status, lifestyle variables and contextual and social factors that characterize the geographical area in which individuals reside. The Mediterranean Diet is a sustainable diet that respects the environment, thus reducing per capita emissions from food production in respect to less sustainable diet. The aim of this paper is to determine the Italians' prevailing food patterns using a composite indicator and to identify which factors determine a higher adherence to the Mediterranean Diet in Italy. By using 15 waves of the ISTAT "Aspect of Daily Life" survey, we constructed an original data set and referred to the multilevel approach which enabled us to distinguish between temporal and cross-sectional effects thus providing valuable insights to policy makers and stakeholders in order to promote the Mediterranean Diet and reap environmental and public health. The results show that education plays an important role in determining food consumption behavior while the tendency to practice sports on a regular basis and to have breakfast and lunch at home positively influence people's adherence to this diet. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Domestic food practices: A study of food management behaviors and the role of food preparation planning in reducing waste.
- Author
-
Romani, Simona, Grappi, Silvia, Bagozzi, Richard P., and Barone, Ada Maria
- Subjects
- *
FOOD habits , *COOKING , *FOOD industrial waste , *FOOD industry , *CLUSTER analysis (Statistics) , *CUSTOMER satisfaction , *DECISION making , *FAMILIES , *FOOD preferences , *HEALTH attitudes , *HEALTH behavior , *LONGITUDINAL method , *SURVEYS , *QUALITATIVE research , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors - Abstract
Recent research has started to show the key role of daily food provision practices in affecting household food waste. Building on and extending these previous contributions, the objective of this paper is to investigate how individuals' everyday practices regarding food (e.g., shopping, cooking, eating, etc.) lead to food waste, and how policy makers and the food industry can implement effective strategies to influence such practices and ultimately help consumers reduce food waste. The research performs three Studies; a critical incident qualitative study (Study 1; N = 514) and a quantitative, survey-based study (Study 2; N = 456) to identify and examine relevant food management behaviors associated with domestic waste. Lastly, findings from a field experiment (Study 3; N = 210) suggest that a specific educational intervention, directed at increasing consumers' perceived skills related to food preparation planning behaviors, reduces domestic food waste. Implications of the research for policy makers and the food industry are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Food consumption when travelling abroad: Young Chinese sojourners' food consumption in the UK.
- Author
-
Yen, Dorothy Ai-wan, Cappellini, Benedetta, Wang, Cheng Lu, and Nguyen, Bang
- Subjects
- *
FOOD consumption , *FOOD habits , *CHINESE restaurants , *TOURISM , *COMPULSIVE eating , *ASIANS , *DECISION making , *DIET , *FOOD preferences , *INTERVIEWING , *RESEARCH methodology , *STUDENTS , *TRAVEL , *QUALITATIVE research , *THEMATIC analysis - Abstract
This qualitative study investigates the everyday food choices of 21 Chinese sojourners living in two different localities in the UK. Findings from a thematic analysis of semi-structured interviews reveal how participants adopt a food consumption pattern, negotiating between ordinary and extraordinary food choices, including home-made Chinese food, Chinese restaurant food, global brands, British food, to "foods of the world". Their zooming in and out of different food consumption choices reflects the transformative identity of the sojourners, between their student role during the week and becoming tourists at the weekends, meshing work and tourism during their sojourning in the UK. Theoretically this paper extends the limited understanding of sojourners, showing how their complex food choices reflect their swift transformative identity. Findings also illustrate how consumption patterns adopted by sojourners living in rural areas differ from the ones living in an urban setting. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. At-home and away-from-home dietary patterns and BMI z-scores in Brazilian adolescents.
- Author
-
Cunha, Diana Barbosa, Bezerra, Ilana Nogueira, Pereira, Rosangela Alves, and Sichieri, Rosely
- Subjects
- *
OVERWEIGHT children , *FOOD consumption , *BODY mass index , *NUTRITION surveys - Abstract
Background: Away-from-home food intake has been associated with high rates of overweight among children and adolescents. However, there are no studies comparing at-home and away-from-home eating patterns among adolescents.Objectives: The objective of this paper was to identify at-home and away-from-home dietary patterns among adolescents in Brazil, and to evaluate the relationship between these patterns and body mass index (BMI) z-scores.Design: Data from the Brazilian National Dietary Survey 2008-2009 were analyzed in this cross-sectional study. Dietary intake was assessed by completion of written food records on two non-consecutive days.Participants/setting: Five thousand two hundred sixty-six adolescents 10-19 years of age living in urban areas of Brazil were included in the analysis.Statistical Analysis: Thirty-two food groups were examined by factor analysis, stratified by at-home and away-from-home eating. The associations between the food patterns and BMI z-scores were ascertained using linear regression analysis.Results: In general, mean at-home food intake was greater than away-from-home food intake, but the ratio of away-from-home/at-home was greater than 30% for baked and deep-fried snacks, soft drinks, sandwiches, pizza, and desserts, and was lower than 10% for rice and beans. Three main similar dietary patterns were identified both at-home and away-from-home: the "Traditional pattern", the "Bread and Butter pattern" and the "Western pattern"; however, away-from-home patterns encompassed more overall food items. Only the at-home "Western pattern" was positively associated with BMI z-scores (β = 0.0006; p < 0.001).Conclusion: Our results indicate that unhealthy dietary pattern consumed at home is associated to BMI z-score, while away-from-home food consumption is not associated. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. The changing meaning of eating out in three English cities 1995-2015.
- Author
-
Paddock, Jessica, Warde, Alan, and Whillans, Jennifer
- Subjects
- *
FOOD habits , *FOOD consumption , *FOOD & society , *NORMALIZATION (Sociology) , *FOOD industry , *CULTURE , *METROPOLITAN areas , *RESTAURANTS , *SOCIAL change - Abstract
This paper examines aspects of the experience of eating out in 2015 and its change over time. In 2015 we repeated an earlier study of eating out in three cities in England in with similar coverage of topics and mostly with identically worded questions, and conducted follow-up in-depth interviews with some of the respondents. We focus on the changing reasons and meanings of the activity as breadth of experience in the population augments and eating main meals outside the home becomes less exceptional or special. What we call 'ordinary' events have become more prevalent, and we delineate two forms of 'ordinary' occasions; the 'impromptu' and the 'regularised'. We describe the consequences for popular understanding of the social significance of eating out in 2015, its informalisation and normalisation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Hervey, Harris, and the parabiotic search for lipostatic signals
- Author
-
Smith, Gerard P.
- Subjects
- *
LEPTIN , *INSULIN , *PARABIOSIS , *FOOD consumption , *FOOD habits , *OBESITY - Abstract
Abstract: This paper is an introduction to the papers by Hervey and Harris that describe their experimental use of parabiosis in rats and mice to search for circulating lipostatic signals. Beginning in 1959 with Hervey’s foundational paper, they detected three parabiotic signals: the Hervey signal decreases food intake and fat mass in rats; the antilipogenic factor (ALF) decreased fat mass, but not food intake in rats; and the leptin-dependent signal in lean partners of ob/ob mice decreased fat mass, but not food intake. The known lipostatic signals, leptin and insulin, have been candidates for the Hervey and ALF signals, but insulin has been excluded and the evidence for leptin is inconclusive. The site of production of the three parabiotic signals and their molecular structure are not known and specific mechanisms of their lipostatic control are incompletely understood. Given their potential importance for understanding the physiology of lipostatic controls and for developing new therapies for obesity, Hervey and Harris make a strong argument for further research on the three parabiotic signals. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Repetitive eating questionnaire [Rep(eat)-Q]: Enlightening the concept of grazing and psychometric properties in a Portuguese sample.
- Author
-
Conceição, Eva M., Mitchell, James E., Machado, Paulo P.P., Vaz, Ana R., Pinto-Bastos, Ana, Ramalho, Sofia, Brandão, Isabel, Simões, Joana Botelho, de Lourdes, Marta, and Freitas, Ana Catarina
- Subjects
- *
QUESTIONNAIRES , *GRAZING , *BODY mass index , *EATING disorders , *DEPRESSION in adolescence , *PSYCHOLOGY , *PHYSIOLOGY , *ANXIETY diagnosis , *DIAGNOSIS of mental depression , *PSYCHOLOGICAL stress , *BEHAVIOR , *COMBINED modality therapy , *COMPARATIVE studies , *DIET , *FOOD habits , *LONGITUDINAL method , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *MEDICAL screening , *PATIENT compliance , *PSYCHOLOGICAL tests , *PSYCHOMETRICS , *REDUCING diets , *RESEARCH , *SELF-evaluation , *SURVEYS , *EVALUATION research , *MORBID obesity , *DIAGNOSIS - Abstract
Background/objective: Grazing has been associated with poor weight loss or weight regain in obese patients undergoing bariatric surgery, but research remains scarce and complicated by the use of different non-validated measures. The aim of this paper is to describe the validation of the Rep(eat)-Q, a self-report measure developed to assess grazing, and investigates its relationship with BMI and psychopathology.Subjects/methods: 1223 university students and community participants (non-clinical; Study A) and 154 pre-bariatric and 84 post-bariatric patients (Study B) completed a set of self-report measures, including the Rep(eat)-Q (worded in Portuguese), to assess disordered eating, depression, anxiety, stress and impulsivity. Exploratory and confirmatory factor analyses tested the factor structure; internal consistency construct, convergent and divergent validity were also tested.Results: The Rep(eat)-Q scales showed good internal consistency (α ≥ 0.849) and temporal stability (rsp = 0.824, p < 0.000). Factor analyses generated two subscales: compulsive grazing and repetitive eating. Significant correlations (p < 0.05) were found between the Rep(eat)-Q and BMI in the non-clinical population and weight loss and weight regain in the bariatric sample. Generally, the correlations with psychological distress were weak (rsp < 0.4). Strong and significant (rsp≥0.4; p's < 0.05) correlations were found between compulsive grazing and eating disorder psychopathology. Repetitive eating subscale was inversely correlated with cognitive restraint (rsp -0.321, p < 0.05) and directly correlated with uncontrolled eating and emotional eating (rsp = 0.754; rsp = 0.691; p < 0.05).Discussion/conclusion: The Rep(eat)-Q is a valid measure to assess grazing in non-clinical and in bariatric surgery populations. Grazing can be conceptualized on the spectrum of disordered eating behavior, and appears associated with loss of control over eating. Considering the link between grazing and weight outcomes, the Rep(eat)-Q represents a necessary strategy for the systematic screening of grazing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. "It's not as easy as saying, 'just get them to eat more veggies'": Exploring healthy eating in residential care in Australia.
- Author
-
Cox, Rachael, Emond, Ruth, Punch, Samantha, McIntosh, Ian, Hall, Kate, Simpson, Angela, and Skouteris, Helen
- Subjects
- *
FOOD habits , *VEGETABLES , *RESIDENTIAL care , *OVERWEIGHT children , *OBESITY , *VIOLENCE & psychology , *ACTIVITIES of daily living , *ATTITUDE (Psychology) , *CHILD nutrition , *FOCUS groups , *FOOD preferences , *FOOD service , *HEALTH attitudes , *MEDICAL personnel , *NUTRITIONAL requirements , *PATIENT compliance , *PSYCHOLOGICAL stress , *TEENAGERS , *PSYCHOLOGICAL factors , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Young people living in residential out-of-home care (henceforth OoHC) are at increased risk of becoming overweight or obese. Currently, recognition of the everyday mechanisms that might be contributing to excess weight for children and young people in this setting is limited. The aim of this study was to better understand the barriers and complexities involved in the provision of a 'healthy' food environment in residential OoHC. Heightening awareness of these factors and how they might compromise a young person's physical health, will inform the development, refinement and evaluation of more sensitive and tailored weight-related interventions for this population. The paper presents a nuanced picture of the complexity of everyday food routines in residential care, and illustrates the ways in which food is 'done' in care; how food can be both symbolic of care but also used to exercise control; the way in which food can be used to create a 'family-like' environment; and the impact of traumatic experiences in childhood on subsequent behaviours and overall functioning in relation to food. It is argued that a health agenda designed for a mainstream population ignores the very complex relationship that children in residential OoHC may have with food. It is recommended that future intervention approaches account for personal food biographies, trauma and children's social backgrounds and how these are implicated in everyday practices and interactions around food. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.