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Adolescents' views of food and eating: Identifying barriers to healthy eating
Authors
Ajzen
Bisogni
+41 more
Brown
Clifford Stevenson
Coleman
Cooke
Dion
Dixey
Eldridge
Flegal
Glenda Doherty
Heinberg
Hill
Hill
Irving
Julie Barnett
Karen Trew
Lattimore
Lytle
Maddox
Morgan
Neumark-Sztainer
Nichter
Nicolson
Nowak
Oakes
Orla T. Muldoon
Potter
Puchta
Roberts
Roberts
Rozin
Seale
Silverman
Spear
Story
Story
Tiggemann
Trew
Wertheim
Wilkinson
Wills
Wills
Publication date
1 June 2007
Publisher
'Elsevier BV'
Doi
Abstract
This is a postprint version of the article. The official published version can be accessed from the link below - © 2006 The Association for Professionals in Services for Adolescents Published by Elsevier Ltd.Contemporary Western society has encouraged an obesogenic culture of eating amongst youth. Multiple factors may influence an adolescent's susceptibility to this eating culture, and thus act as a barrier to healthy eating. Given the increasing prevalence of obesity amongst adolescents, the need to reduce these barriers has become a necessity. Twelve focus group discussions of single-sex groups of boys or girls ranging from early to-mid adolescence (N = 73) were employed to identify key perceptions of, and influences upon, healthy eating behaviour. Thematic analysis identified four key factors as barriers to healthy eating. These factors were: physical and psychological reinforcement of eating behaviour; perceptions of food and eating behaviour; perceptions of contradictory food-related social pressures; Q perceptions of the concept of healthy eating itself. Overall, healthy eating as a goal in its own right is notably absent from the data and would appear to be elided by competing pressures to eat unhealthily and to lose weight. This insight should inform the development of future food-related communications to adolescents. (c) 2006 The Association for Professionals in Services for Adolescents.Funding from Safefood: the food safety promotion board is acknowledged
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Last time updated on 15/02/2013
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Last time updated on 15/02/2019