Psychological determinants of consumer acceptance of personalised nutrition in 9 European countries.

To develop a model of the psychological factors which predict people's intention to adopt personalised nutrition. Potential determinants of adoption included perceived risk and benefit, perceived self-efficacy, internal locus of control and health commitment.A questionnaire, developed from expl...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Rui Poínhos, Ivo A van der Lans, Audrey Rankin, Arnout R H Fischer, Brendan Bunting, Sharron Kuznesof, Barbara Stewart-Knox, Lynn J Frewer
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2014-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4204923?pdf=render
id doaj-79170f05c1fb4b0d96f644bedd05d859
record_format Article
spelling doaj-79170f05c1fb4b0d96f644bedd05d8592020-11-25T02:12:00ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032014-01-01910e11061410.1371/journal.pone.0110614Psychological determinants of consumer acceptance of personalised nutrition in 9 European countries.Rui PoínhosIvo A van der LansAudrey RankinArnout R H FischerBrendan BuntingSharron KuznesofBarbara Stewart-KnoxLynn J FrewerTo develop a model of the psychological factors which predict people's intention to adopt personalised nutrition. Potential determinants of adoption included perceived risk and benefit, perceived self-efficacy, internal locus of control and health commitment.A questionnaire, developed from exploratory study data and the existing theoretical literature, and including validated psychological scales was administered to N=9381 participants from 9 European countries (Germany, Greece, Ireland, Poland, Portugal, Spain, the Netherlands, the UK, and Norway).Structural equation modelling indicated that the greater participants' perceived benefits to be associated with personalised nutrition, the more positive their attitudes were towards personalised nutrition, and the greater their intention to adopt it. Higher levels of nutrition self-efficacy were related to more positive attitudes towards, and a greater expressed intention to adopt, personalised nutrition. Other constructs positively impacting attitudes towards personalised nutrition included more positive perceptions of the efficacy of regulatory control to protect consumers (e.g. in relation to personal data protection), higher self-reported internal health locus of control, and health commitment. Although higher perceived risk had a negative relationship with attitude and an inverse relationship with perceived benefit, its effects on attitude and intention to adopt personalised nutrition was less influential than perceived benefit. The model was stable across the different European countries, suggesting that psychological factors determining adoption of personalised nutrition have generic applicability across different European countries.The results suggest that transparent provision of information about potential benefits, and protection of consumers' personal data is important for adoption, delivery of public health benefits, and commercialisation of personalised nutrition.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4204923?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Rui Poínhos
Ivo A van der Lans
Audrey Rankin
Arnout R H Fischer
Brendan Bunting
Sharron Kuznesof
Barbara Stewart-Knox
Lynn J Frewer
spellingShingle Rui Poínhos
Ivo A van der Lans
Audrey Rankin
Arnout R H Fischer
Brendan Bunting
Sharron Kuznesof
Barbara Stewart-Knox
Lynn J Frewer
Psychological determinants of consumer acceptance of personalised nutrition in 9 European countries.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Rui Poínhos
Ivo A van der Lans
Audrey Rankin
Arnout R H Fischer
Brendan Bunting
Sharron Kuznesof
Barbara Stewart-Knox
Lynn J Frewer
author_sort Rui Poínhos
title Psychological determinants of consumer acceptance of personalised nutrition in 9 European countries.
title_short Psychological determinants of consumer acceptance of personalised nutrition in 9 European countries.
title_full Psychological determinants of consumer acceptance of personalised nutrition in 9 European countries.
title_fullStr Psychological determinants of consumer acceptance of personalised nutrition in 9 European countries.
title_full_unstemmed Psychological determinants of consumer acceptance of personalised nutrition in 9 European countries.
title_sort psychological determinants of consumer acceptance of personalised nutrition in 9 european countries.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2014-01-01
description To develop a model of the psychological factors which predict people's intention to adopt personalised nutrition. Potential determinants of adoption included perceived risk and benefit, perceived self-efficacy, internal locus of control and health commitment.A questionnaire, developed from exploratory study data and the existing theoretical literature, and including validated psychological scales was administered to N=9381 participants from 9 European countries (Germany, Greece, Ireland, Poland, Portugal, Spain, the Netherlands, the UK, and Norway).Structural equation modelling indicated that the greater participants' perceived benefits to be associated with personalised nutrition, the more positive their attitudes were towards personalised nutrition, and the greater their intention to adopt it. Higher levels of nutrition self-efficacy were related to more positive attitudes towards, and a greater expressed intention to adopt, personalised nutrition. Other constructs positively impacting attitudes towards personalised nutrition included more positive perceptions of the efficacy of regulatory control to protect consumers (e.g. in relation to personal data protection), higher self-reported internal health locus of control, and health commitment. Although higher perceived risk had a negative relationship with attitude and an inverse relationship with perceived benefit, its effects on attitude and intention to adopt personalised nutrition was less influential than perceived benefit. The model was stable across the different European countries, suggesting that psychological factors determining adoption of personalised nutrition have generic applicability across different European countries.The results suggest that transparent provision of information about potential benefits, and protection of consumers' personal data is important for adoption, delivery of public health benefits, and commercialisation of personalised nutrition.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4204923?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT ruipoinhos psychologicaldeterminantsofconsumeracceptanceofpersonalisednutritionin9europeancountries
AT ivoavanderlans psychologicaldeterminantsofconsumeracceptanceofpersonalisednutritionin9europeancountries
AT audreyrankin psychologicaldeterminantsofconsumeracceptanceofpersonalisednutritionin9europeancountries
AT arnoutrhfischer psychologicaldeterminantsofconsumeracceptanceofpersonalisednutritionin9europeancountries
AT brendanbunting psychologicaldeterminantsofconsumeracceptanceofpersonalisednutritionin9europeancountries
AT sharronkuznesof psychologicaldeterminantsofconsumeracceptanceofpersonalisednutritionin9europeancountries
AT barbarastewartknox psychologicaldeterminantsofconsumeracceptanceofpersonalisednutritionin9europeancountries
AT lynnjfrewer psychologicaldeterminantsofconsumeracceptanceofpersonalisednutritionin9europeancountries
_version_ 1724911297214021632