Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
939659 Appetite 2013 11 Pages PDF
Abstract

In France, mealtimes constitute a strong cultural trait, especially the three-meal pattern. The aim of our study was to test whether this pattern is still prevailing and to what extent familial structure, gender, poverty and migration have an effect on meal frequency. This study is based on a cross-sectional analysis of data collected in 2010 in the SIRS cohort study among a representative sample of 3006 adults in the Paris metropolitan area. We developed simple logistic models and multinomial logistic models. Results confirmed that the three-meal pattern remains strongly rooted in food habits in the Paris area. For three meals a day, the presence of a partner was more significant than the presence of children in the household. However, the study highlighted that one out of four inhabitants declared eating two meals a day only. The results emphasized gender differences in eating two meals a day, as being less frequent but more distinctive for women than for men. For women indeed, it was mainly linked to economic and social vulnerability (women below the poverty line, foreigners, in single parent families). In this respect, the paper provides new insights into the social differentiation of meal patterns, and calls for further analysis.

► The three-meal pattern remains strongly rooted in food habits in the Paris area. ► One out of four inhabitants declared eating two meals a day. ► Two meals a day is less frequent but more distinctive for women than for men. ► For women, two meals a day is mainly linked to economic and social vulnerability.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences Food Science
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