Meals and snacks from the child’s perspective: the contribution of qualitative methods to the development of dietary interventions

To explore the everyday consumption of meals and snacks from the child's perspective, among those with healthier v. less healthy dietary habits. The sample in this qualitative study comprised two groups of Danish schoolchildren aged 10 to 11 years, one with a healthier diet (n 9) and the other...

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Veröffentlicht in:Public health nutrition 2009-06, Vol.12 (6), p.739-747
Hauptverfasser: Husby, Ida, Heitmann, Berit L, O’Doherty Jensen, Katherine
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container_title Public health nutrition
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creator Husby, Ida
Heitmann, Berit L
O’Doherty Jensen, Katherine
description To explore the everyday consumption of meals and snacks from the child's perspective, among those with healthier v. less healthy dietary habits. The sample in this qualitative study comprised two groups of Danish schoolchildren aged 10 to 11 years, one with a healthier diet (n 9) and the other with a less healthy diet (n 8). Both groups were recruited from respondents to a dietary survey. Semi-structured interviews took their starting point in photographs of their meals and snacks taken by the children themselves. Both subgroups of children had a meal pattern with three main meals and two to four snacks. We found a connection between the nutritional quality of the diet and the social contexts of consumption, especially with regard to snacks. Among children with healthier eating habits, both snacks and meals tended to be shared social events and items of poor nutritional quality functioned as markers of a special social occasion. This was not the case among children with less healthy eating habits. All children described particular rules governing food consumption within their families. Although only some of them had participated in the development of these rules, and despite the fact that rules were different and were perceived as having been developed for different reasons, children from both subgroups tended to accept them. The results of the study suggest that dietary interventions designed to promote children's health should focus more on the different social contexts of consumption and more on the role of parents.
doi_str_mv 10.1017/S1368980008003248
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Although only some of them had participated in the development of these rules, and despite the fact that rules were different and were perceived as having been developed for different reasons, children from both subgroups tended to accept them. The results of the study suggest that dietary interventions designed to promote children's health should focus more on the different social contexts of consumption and more on the role of parents.</abstract><cop>Cambridge, UK</cop><pub>Cambridge University Press</pub><pmid>18671890</pmid><doi>10.1017/S1368980008003248</doi><tpages>9</tpages><oa>free_for_read</oa></addata></record>
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subjects Adult
Attitude to Health
Child
child nutrition
Child Nutrition Sciences
Child Nutrition Sciences - education
Child Nutritional Physiological Phenomena
Child Nutritional Physiological Phenomena - physiology
Children
Children & youth
Cross-Sectional Studies
Denmark
Diet
Diet - psychology
Diet - standards
Diet Surveys
Eating
Eating behavior
eating habits
education
Families & family life
Feeding Behavior
Feeding Behavior - psychology
Female
Food
Food consumption
food intake
Habits
Health care
Health Promotion
Humans
Interviews
Interviews as Topic
Male
Meal pattern
Meals
meals (menu)
Nutrition
Nutrition research
nutritional adequacy
Nutritive Value
Parent-Child Relations
parental role
Parents & parenting
physiology
psychology
Psychology, Child
psychosocial factors
Public health
qualitative analysis
Qualitative methods
Qualitative research
school children
Snack foods
snacks
social eating
Soft drinks
Software
Subgroups
Sugar
title Meals and snacks from the child’s perspective: the contribution of qualitative methods to the development of dietary interventions
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