Describing the situational contexts of sweetened product consumption in a Middle Eastern Canadian community: application of a mixed method design.

Little is known about the situational contexts in which individuals consume processed sources of dietary sugars. This study aimed to describe the situational contexts associated with the consumption of sweetened food and drink products in a Catholic Middle Eastern Canadian community. A two-stage exp...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Jean-Claude Moubarac, Margaret Cargo, Olivier Receveur, Mark Daniel
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2012-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3448609?pdf=render
id doaj-be653e3af6d44bacbbfaa4553fc48676
record_format Article
spelling doaj-be653e3af6d44bacbbfaa4553fc486762020-11-25T02:42:28ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032012-01-0179e4473810.1371/journal.pone.0044738Describing the situational contexts of sweetened product consumption in a Middle Eastern Canadian community: application of a mixed method design.Jean-Claude MoubaracMargaret CargoOlivier ReceveurMark DanielLittle is known about the situational contexts in which individuals consume processed sources of dietary sugars. This study aimed to describe the situational contexts associated with the consumption of sweetened food and drink products in a Catholic Middle Eastern Canadian community. A two-stage exploratory sequential mixed-method design was employed with a rationale of triangulation. In stage 1 (n = 62), items and themes describing the situational contexts of sweetened food and drink product consumption were identified from semi-structured interviews and were used to develop the content for the Situational Context Instrument for Sweetened Product Consumption (SCISPC). Face validity, readability and cultural relevance of the instrument were assessed. In stage 2 (n = 192), a cross-sectional study was conducted and exploratory factor analysis was used to examine the structure of themes that emerged from the qualitative analysis as a means of furthering construct validation. The SCISPC reliability and predictive validity on the daily consumption of sweetened products were also assessed. In stage 1, six themes and 40-items describing the situational contexts of sweetened product consumption emerged from the qualitative analysis and were used to construct the first draft of the SCISPC. In stage 2, factor analysis enabled the clarification and/or expansion of the instrument's initial thematic structure. The revised SCISPC has seven factors and 31 items describing the situational contexts of sweetened product consumption. Initial validation of the instrument indicated it has excellent internal consistency and adequate test-retest reliability. Two factors of the SCISPC had predictive validity for the daily consumption of total sugar from sweetened products (Snacking and Energy demands) while the other factors (Socialization, Indulgence, Constraints, Visual Stimuli and Emotional needs) were rather associated to occasional consumption of these products.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3448609?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jean-Claude Moubarac
Margaret Cargo
Olivier Receveur
Mark Daniel
spellingShingle Jean-Claude Moubarac
Margaret Cargo
Olivier Receveur
Mark Daniel
Describing the situational contexts of sweetened product consumption in a Middle Eastern Canadian community: application of a mixed method design.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Jean-Claude Moubarac
Margaret Cargo
Olivier Receveur
Mark Daniel
author_sort Jean-Claude Moubarac
title Describing the situational contexts of sweetened product consumption in a Middle Eastern Canadian community: application of a mixed method design.
title_short Describing the situational contexts of sweetened product consumption in a Middle Eastern Canadian community: application of a mixed method design.
title_full Describing the situational contexts of sweetened product consumption in a Middle Eastern Canadian community: application of a mixed method design.
title_fullStr Describing the situational contexts of sweetened product consumption in a Middle Eastern Canadian community: application of a mixed method design.
title_full_unstemmed Describing the situational contexts of sweetened product consumption in a Middle Eastern Canadian community: application of a mixed method design.
title_sort describing the situational contexts of sweetened product consumption in a middle eastern canadian community: application of a mixed method design.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2012-01-01
description Little is known about the situational contexts in which individuals consume processed sources of dietary sugars. This study aimed to describe the situational contexts associated with the consumption of sweetened food and drink products in a Catholic Middle Eastern Canadian community. A two-stage exploratory sequential mixed-method design was employed with a rationale of triangulation. In stage 1 (n = 62), items and themes describing the situational contexts of sweetened food and drink product consumption were identified from semi-structured interviews and were used to develop the content for the Situational Context Instrument for Sweetened Product Consumption (SCISPC). Face validity, readability and cultural relevance of the instrument were assessed. In stage 2 (n = 192), a cross-sectional study was conducted and exploratory factor analysis was used to examine the structure of themes that emerged from the qualitative analysis as a means of furthering construct validation. The SCISPC reliability and predictive validity on the daily consumption of sweetened products were also assessed. In stage 1, six themes and 40-items describing the situational contexts of sweetened product consumption emerged from the qualitative analysis and were used to construct the first draft of the SCISPC. In stage 2, factor analysis enabled the clarification and/or expansion of the instrument's initial thematic structure. The revised SCISPC has seven factors and 31 items describing the situational contexts of sweetened product consumption. Initial validation of the instrument indicated it has excellent internal consistency and adequate test-retest reliability. Two factors of the SCISPC had predictive validity for the daily consumption of total sugar from sweetened products (Snacking and Energy demands) while the other factors (Socialization, Indulgence, Constraints, Visual Stimuli and Emotional needs) were rather associated to occasional consumption of these products.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3448609?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT jeanclaudemoubarac describingthesituationalcontextsofsweetenedproductconsumptioninamiddleeasterncanadiancommunityapplicationofamixedmethoddesign
AT margaretcargo describingthesituationalcontextsofsweetenedproductconsumptioninamiddleeasterncanadiancommunityapplicationofamixedmethoddesign
AT olivierreceveur describingthesituationalcontextsofsweetenedproductconsumptioninamiddleeasterncanadiancommunityapplicationofamixedmethoddesign
AT markdaniel describingthesituationalcontextsofsweetenedproductconsumptioninamiddleeasterncanadiancommunityapplicationofamixedmethoddesign
_version_ 1724773657871384576