Does socio-economic status moderate the associations between psychosocial predictors and fruit intake in schoolchildren? The Pro Children study

This study tested whether socio-economic status (SES) moderated the association between the psychosocial constructs included in the attitude-social influence-self-efficacy (ASE) model and fruit intake in Norwegian schoolchildren. The sample consisted of 962 Norwegian sixth graders, mean age 11.3 yea...

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Veröffentlicht in:Health education research 2010-02, Vol.25 (1), p.121-134
Hauptverfasser: Sandvik, C., Gjestad, R., Samdal, O., Brug, J., Klepp, K.-I.
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Gjestad, R.
Samdal, O.
Brug, J.
Klepp, K.-I.
description This study tested whether socio-economic status (SES) moderated the association between the psychosocial constructs included in the attitude-social influence-self-efficacy (ASE) model and fruit intake in Norwegian schoolchildren. The sample consisted of 962 Norwegian sixth graders, mean age 11.3 years. They were split into three SES groups, and multi-group structural equation modeling (MSEM) was used. Children in the highest SES group reported eating fruit more frequently and reported more positive ASE variables than children in the lower SES groups. This was particularly true for social environmental factors, home availability of fruit and intention to eat fruit. MSEM showed that the relationships specified in the adapted ASE model were moderated by SES, as we did not find support for equal model structure across the three samples. Model modification for each SES group separately showed that the relation between home availability and fruit intake was not significant for the medium and low SES groups, and the relation between self-efficacy and intention to eat fruit was not significant for the medium SES group. Future interventions aiming at increasing fruit intake in children need to be sensitive to such SES-related differences and should in particular affect factors that may impede fruit intake in the lower SES groups.
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source MEDLINE; Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); Jstor Complete Legacy; Oxford University Press Journals All Titles (1996-Current); Alma/SFX Local Collection
subjects Attitude
Child
Children
Correlation
Cross-Sectional Studies
Eating Habits
Female
Food
Food Preferences - psychology
Foreign Countries
Fruit
Grade 6
Health Behavior
Health Education
Health Promotion
Health technology assessment
Healthy food
Humans
Intention
Male
Norway
Nutrition
ORIGINAL ARTICLES
Predictor Variables
Psychosocial factors
Self Efficacy
Sex Factors
Social Environment
Social Influences
Socioeconomic Factors
Socioeconomic Status
Structural Equation Models
Student Attitudes
title Does socio-economic status moderate the associations between psychosocial predictors and fruit intake in schoolchildren? The Pro Children study
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