Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
939450 Appetite 2015 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Parents – not friends – are the main influencer of adolescents' healthy eating.•What parents do is more important than what they say.•A shared context may account for some of the parent–child consistency.•Interventions should target children's self-efficacy and outcome expectations.•The family context is important when implementing healthy eating interventions.

It is commonly believed that during adolescence children become increasingly influenced by peers at the expense of parents. To test the strength of this tendency with regards to healthy eating (fruit and vegetable intake), a survey was completed by 757 adolescent–parent dyads. Our theoretical framework builds on social cognitive theory and the focus theory of normative conduct, and data are analysed by means of confirmatory factor analysis and structural equation modelling. The study reveals that when it comes to adolescents' fruit and vegetable intake, parents remain the main influencer, with what they do (descriptive norms) being more important than what they say (injunctive norms). The study contributes to a more comprehensive understanding of what influences adolescent healthy eating, including the social influence of parents and friends, while also taking adolescent self-efficacy and outcome expectations into account. No previous studies have included all these factors in the same analysis. The study has a number of important implications: (1) healthy eating interventions should aim at strengthening self-efficacy and positive outcome expectations among adolescents, (2) the family context should be included when implementing healthy eating interventions and (3) parents' awareness of their influence on their children's healthy eating should be reinforced.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences Food Science
Authors
, , ,