Women of lower educational attainment have lower food involvement and eat less fruit and vegetables

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Women of lower educational attainment have lower food involvement and eat less fruit and vegetables. / Barker, M.; Lawrence, W.; Woadden, J.; Crozier, S. R.; Skinner, T. C.

In: Appetite, Vol. 50, No. 2-3, 01.03.2008, p. 464-468.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Barker, M, Lawrence, W, Woadden, J, Crozier, SR & Skinner, TC 2008, 'Women of lower educational attainment have lower food involvement and eat less fruit and vegetables', Appetite, vol. 50, no. 2-3, pp. 464-468. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.appet.2007.10.004

APA

Barker, M., Lawrence, W., Woadden, J., Crozier, S. R., & Skinner, T. C. (2008). Women of lower educational attainment have lower food involvement and eat less fruit and vegetables. Appetite, 50(2-3), 464-468. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.appet.2007.10.004

Vancouver

Barker M, Lawrence W, Woadden J, Crozier SR, Skinner TC. Women of lower educational attainment have lower food involvement and eat less fruit and vegetables. Appetite. 2008 Mar 1;50(2-3):464-468. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.appet.2007.10.004

Author

Barker, M. ; Lawrence, W. ; Woadden, J. ; Crozier, S. R. ; Skinner, T. C. / Women of lower educational attainment have lower food involvement and eat less fruit and vegetables. In: Appetite. 2008 ; Vol. 50, No. 2-3. pp. 464-468.

Bibtex

@article{39aff4b88baa4686a77b3a6b2e2794a3,
title = "Women of lower educational attainment have lower food involvement and eat less fruit and vegetables",
abstract = "Women who leave school with few or no educational qualifications are less likely to have diets that meet current recommendations than women who attain more qualifications at school. We hypothesise that lower 'food involvement', meaning that food has a lower level of importance in their lives, explains the poorer quality diets of women of lower educational attainment. We administered Bell and Marshall [(2003). The construct of food involvement in behavioral research: Scale development and validation. Appetite, 40, 235-244.] Food Involvement scale to 242 women of varied educational attainment, of whom 127 were also asked how often they ate fruit and vegetables. Women's food involvement decreased with decreasing educational attainment. Forty-two percent of women who had no educational qualifications were in the lowest quarter of the food involvement score, compared with 12% of women with degrees. Women with lower scores on the food involvement scale also reported eating fruit and vegetables less often. The odds of eating fewer fruit and vegetables rose with lower educational attainment and with lower food involvement scores, suggesting that each has an independent effect. We have shown that the Food Involvement scale discriminates between women, is associated with other characteristics and predicts dietary quality. We now plan to use it in a larger, representative population of women of lower educational attainment to examine its role along with other psychological variables in determining dietary quality.",
keywords = "Dietary quality, Education, Food involvement, Fruit and vegetables, Women",
author = "M. Barker and W. Lawrence and J. Woadden and Crozier, {S. R.} and Skinner, {T. C.}",
year = "2008",
month = mar,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1016/j.appet.2007.10.004",
language = "English",
volume = "50",
pages = "464--468",
journal = "Appetite",
issn = "0195-6663",
publisher = "Elsevier",
number = "2-3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Women of lower educational attainment have lower food involvement and eat less fruit and vegetables

AU - Barker, M.

AU - Lawrence, W.

AU - Woadden, J.

AU - Crozier, S. R.

AU - Skinner, T. C.

PY - 2008/3/1

Y1 - 2008/3/1

N2 - Women who leave school with few or no educational qualifications are less likely to have diets that meet current recommendations than women who attain more qualifications at school. We hypothesise that lower 'food involvement', meaning that food has a lower level of importance in their lives, explains the poorer quality diets of women of lower educational attainment. We administered Bell and Marshall [(2003). The construct of food involvement in behavioral research: Scale development and validation. Appetite, 40, 235-244.] Food Involvement scale to 242 women of varied educational attainment, of whom 127 were also asked how often they ate fruit and vegetables. Women's food involvement decreased with decreasing educational attainment. Forty-two percent of women who had no educational qualifications were in the lowest quarter of the food involvement score, compared with 12% of women with degrees. Women with lower scores on the food involvement scale also reported eating fruit and vegetables less often. The odds of eating fewer fruit and vegetables rose with lower educational attainment and with lower food involvement scores, suggesting that each has an independent effect. We have shown that the Food Involvement scale discriminates between women, is associated with other characteristics and predicts dietary quality. We now plan to use it in a larger, representative population of women of lower educational attainment to examine its role along with other psychological variables in determining dietary quality.

AB - Women who leave school with few or no educational qualifications are less likely to have diets that meet current recommendations than women who attain more qualifications at school. We hypothesise that lower 'food involvement', meaning that food has a lower level of importance in their lives, explains the poorer quality diets of women of lower educational attainment. We administered Bell and Marshall [(2003). The construct of food involvement in behavioral research: Scale development and validation. Appetite, 40, 235-244.] Food Involvement scale to 242 women of varied educational attainment, of whom 127 were also asked how often they ate fruit and vegetables. Women's food involvement decreased with decreasing educational attainment. Forty-two percent of women who had no educational qualifications were in the lowest quarter of the food involvement score, compared with 12% of women with degrees. Women with lower scores on the food involvement scale also reported eating fruit and vegetables less often. The odds of eating fewer fruit and vegetables rose with lower educational attainment and with lower food involvement scores, suggesting that each has an independent effect. We have shown that the Food Involvement scale discriminates between women, is associated with other characteristics and predicts dietary quality. We now plan to use it in a larger, representative population of women of lower educational attainment to examine its role along with other psychological variables in determining dietary quality.

KW - Dietary quality

KW - Education

KW - Food involvement

KW - Fruit and vegetables

KW - Women

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=39749125671&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.1016/j.appet.2007.10.004

DO - 10.1016/j.appet.2007.10.004

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 18023500

AN - SCOPUS:39749125671

VL - 50

SP - 464

EP - 468

JO - Appetite

JF - Appetite

SN - 0195-6663

IS - 2-3

ER -

ID: 189876133