Demographic, Psychosocial, and Educational Factors Related to Fruit and Vegetable Consumption in Adults
Recent global statistics estimate 20% of all cancer incidence could be prevented if Americans would modify their eating habits to increase fruit and vegetable intake to the minimum recommended level of five servings daily. Educational strategies to change eating behavior would benefit from a greate...
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ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-259802020-09-26T05:32:52Z Demographic, Psychosocial, and Educational Factors Related to Fruit and Vegetable Consumption in Adults Stables, Gloria J. Human Development Wiswell, Albert W. Huebner, Angela J. Cline, Marvin Gerald Hertzler, Ann A. Storey, Maureen Nutrition Education Self-Efficacy Psychosocial Factors Dietary Behavior Recent global statistics estimate 20% of all cancer incidence could be prevented if Americans would modify their eating habits to increase fruit and vegetable intake to the minimum recommended level of five servings daily. Educational strategies to change eating behavior would benefit from a greater understanding of psychosocial and demographic factors related dietary behavior. Secondary analysis of a nationally representative survey of 2655 adults was completed to assess differences between low-income and high-income adults in psychosocial, demographic, and educational factors related to fruit and vegetable intake. Significant differences in self-efficacy, awareness/knowledge, and cost and availability of fruits and vegetables were found between the low-income and high-income groups. In the low-income group, 37% of the variance in total fruit and vegetable consumption was explained by psychosocial and demographic factors, with demographics, self-efficacy and awareness/knowledge being the most significant predictors. In the high-income group, 34% of the variance in total fruit and vegetable consumption was explained by psychosocial and demographic factors, with self-efficacy alone accounting for 14% of the variance. This research suggests that, regardless of income category, social cognitive factors, in particular self-efficacy and knowledge/awareness of the health message, are stronger predictors of fruit and vegetable consumption than are perceived barrier factors. Given the weaknesses of the survey instrument, the findings need to interpreted with caution. Policy inferences can be suggested from this research, but would need further research findings before implementation of nutrition policy recommendations. The implications of these research findings are that nutrition education interventions to increase fruit and vegetable consumption should be aimed at affecting those psychosocial factors that are predictive of behavior change. In particular, differences by income level between psychosocial, education, and behavior responses underscore the need for tailoring educational interventions by income group for greater impact. The most relevant psychosocial predictors of fruit and vegetable consumption in adults are self-efficacy, awareness/knowledge of the health message, social support, and weak intent. The most relevant demographic predictors were smoking status, educational level, and age. Income level appears to share variance with other demographic variables and should be explored in further research. Ph. D. 2014-03-14T20:06:41Z 2014-03-14T20:06:41Z 2001-12-12 2002-01-10 2003-01-11 2002-01-11 Dissertation etd-01102002-165320 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/25980 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-01102002-165320/ backmatter.pdf bodymatter.pdf frontmatter.pdf In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ application/pdf application/pdf application/pdf Virginia Tech |
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Nutrition Education Self-Efficacy Psychosocial Factors Dietary Behavior |
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Nutrition Education Self-Efficacy Psychosocial Factors Dietary Behavior Stables, Gloria J. Demographic, Psychosocial, and Educational Factors Related to Fruit and Vegetable Consumption in Adults |
description |
Recent global statistics estimate 20% of all cancer incidence could be prevented if Americans would modify their eating habits to increase fruit and vegetable intake to the minimum recommended level of five servings daily. Educational strategies to change eating behavior would benefit from a greater understanding of psychosocial and demographic factors related dietary behavior.
Secondary analysis of a nationally representative survey of 2655 adults was completed to assess differences between low-income and high-income adults in psychosocial, demographic, and educational factors related to fruit and vegetable intake. Significant differences in self-efficacy, awareness/knowledge, and cost and availability of fruits and vegetables were found between the low-income and high-income groups. In the low-income group, 37% of the variance in total fruit and vegetable consumption was explained by psychosocial and demographic factors, with demographics, self-efficacy and awareness/knowledge being the most significant predictors. In the high-income group, 34% of the variance in total fruit and vegetable consumption was explained by psychosocial and demographic factors, with self-efficacy alone accounting for 14% of the variance.
This research suggests that, regardless of income category, social cognitive factors, in particular self-efficacy and knowledge/awareness of the health message, are stronger predictors of fruit and vegetable consumption than are perceived barrier factors. Given the weaknesses of the survey instrument, the findings need to interpreted with caution. Policy inferences can be suggested from this research, but would need further research findings before implementation of nutrition policy recommendations.
The implications of these research findings are that nutrition education interventions to increase fruit and vegetable consumption should be aimed at affecting those psychosocial factors that are predictive of behavior change. In particular, differences by income level between psychosocial, education, and behavior responses underscore the need for tailoring educational interventions by income group for greater impact.
The most relevant psychosocial predictors of fruit and vegetable consumption in adults are self-efficacy, awareness/knowledge of the health message, social support, and weak intent. The most relevant demographic predictors were smoking status, educational level, and age. Income level appears to share variance with other demographic variables and should be explored in further research. === Ph. D. |
author2 |
Human Development |
author_facet |
Human Development Stables, Gloria J. |
author |
Stables, Gloria J. |
author_sort |
Stables, Gloria J. |
title |
Demographic, Psychosocial, and Educational Factors Related to Fruit and Vegetable Consumption in Adults |
title_short |
Demographic, Psychosocial, and Educational Factors Related to Fruit and Vegetable Consumption in Adults |
title_full |
Demographic, Psychosocial, and Educational Factors Related to Fruit and Vegetable Consumption in Adults |
title_fullStr |
Demographic, Psychosocial, and Educational Factors Related to Fruit and Vegetable Consumption in Adults |
title_full_unstemmed |
Demographic, Psychosocial, and Educational Factors Related to Fruit and Vegetable Consumption in Adults |
title_sort |
demographic, psychosocial, and educational factors related to fruit and vegetable consumption in adults |
publisher |
Virginia Tech |
publishDate |
2014 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/10919/25980 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-01102002-165320/ |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT stablesgloriaj demographicpsychosocialandeducationalfactorsrelatedtofruitandvegetableconsumptioninadults |
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1719341089881587712 |