Reducing meat consumption: The influence of life course transitions, barriers and enablers, and effective strategies according to young Dutch adults

•Leaving the parental home provides a window of opportunity for reducing meat consumption among young adults.•Barriers to reducing meat consumption included taste, perceived high prices of meat alternatives and habits.•Enablers included care for the environment and animal welfare, enjoyment of small...

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Veröffentlicht in:Food quality and preference 2022-09, Vol.100, p.104623, Article 104623
Hauptverfasser: van den Berg, Saskia W., van den Brink, Annelien C., Wagemakers, Annemarie, den Broeder, Lea
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Leaving the parental home provides a window of opportunity for reducing meat consumption among young adults.•Barriers to reducing meat consumption included taste, perceived high prices of meat alternatives and habits.•Enablers included care for the environment and animal welfare, enjoyment of smaller meat portions and saving money.•An integrated approach combining changes in the physical and social environment can help to reduce meat consumption. High consumption of animal-source foods, specifically meat, adversely affects human health and the environment. Dietary habits are shaped at younger ages and a reduction in meat consumption may be facilitated by the life course transitions in early adulthood, but studies are limited. This study among young Dutch adults aimed to describe their perceptions on the influence of life course transitions on meat consumption, barriers and enablers to reduce meat consumption, and strategies for reducing meat consumption. Barriers and enablers were grouped applying the COM-B model that includes capability, opportunity, and motivation. This quantitative cross-sectional study included a representative sample of 1806 young adults from two Dutch consumer panels who completed an online survey. Young adults frequently reported life course transitions, especially those related to moving house, to have decreased their meat consumption. Barriers and enablers to reduce meat consumption were identified for all three factors of the COM-B model. Important barriers included taste, perceived high prices of meat alternatives, and habits. In contrast, important enablers included care for the environment and animal welfare, enjoyment of smaller portions of meat and saving money. However, barriers and enablers largely differed by groups of meat consumption frequency. Self-perceived effective strategies for reducing meat consumption were price reduction of meat alternatives, recipes for vegetarian meals, and more attractive meat alternatives. The findings of this study are relevant for the development of targeted behaviour-change programmes including interventions in the physical and the social environment (like lowering prices and improving the offer of meat alternatives).
ISSN:0950-3293
1873-6343
DOI:10.1016/j.foodqual.2022.104623