2014
DOI: 10.1017/s1368980014001232
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

Exploration and forecasting of behaviours and factors relating to fruit and vegetable intake among seniors in the community

Abstract: Objective: The present study investigated the current status of fruit and vegetable intake among seniors and assessed the relationship between personal background factors, social psychological factors and environmental factors of the study participants and their fruit and vegetable consumption behaviour. Design: Research data were collected through individual interviews using a questionnaire developed by the authors. SPSS for Windows 15·0 statistical software was used to process and analyse the data. Setting: … Show more

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
1
1

Citation Types

0
2
0

Year Published

2017
2017
2022
2022

Publication Types

Select...
3

Relationship

0
3

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 3 publications
(2 citation statements)
references
References 14 publications
0
2
0
Order By: Relevance
“…These are covered briefly because of the very limited dietary data obtained and because they often recapitulate the findings of the now extensive earlier literature. Irrespective of whether the design is cross-sectional (de Bruijn et al, 2012a; Erinosho et al, 2015; Hsu, Liao, Chu, Yang, & Chen, 2015; Menozzi, Sogari, & Mora, 2015; Szczepanska, Scholz, Liszewska, & Luszczynska, 2013 [this also included a longitudinal component]; Tak et al, 2013) or longitudinal (albeit over weeks; Allom & Mullan, 2012; Reyes Fernández et al, 2015; Godinho, Alvarez, Lima, & Schwarzer, 2014; Kothe & Mullan, 2015; Lange, Corbett, Lippke, Knoll, & Schwarzer, 2015; Tomasone et al, 2015) and with various covariates, self-efficacy again emerged as a frequent predictor of fruit and/or vegetable intake (see Table 7 for summary). Habit strength was also identified again as an important factor (see Table 7 for summary).…”
Section: Attitudes Beliefs and Valuesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These are covered briefly because of the very limited dietary data obtained and because they often recapitulate the findings of the now extensive earlier literature. Irrespective of whether the design is cross-sectional (de Bruijn et al, 2012a; Erinosho et al, 2015; Hsu, Liao, Chu, Yang, & Chen, 2015; Menozzi, Sogari, & Mora, 2015; Szczepanska, Scholz, Liszewska, & Luszczynska, 2013 [this also included a longitudinal component]; Tak et al, 2013) or longitudinal (albeit over weeks; Allom & Mullan, 2012; Reyes Fernández et al, 2015; Godinho, Alvarez, Lima, & Schwarzer, 2014; Kothe & Mullan, 2015; Lange, Corbett, Lippke, Knoll, & Schwarzer, 2015; Tomasone et al, 2015) and with various covariates, self-efficacy again emerged as a frequent predictor of fruit and/or vegetable intake (see Table 7 for summary). Habit strength was also identified again as an important factor (see Table 7 for summary).…”
Section: Attitudes Beliefs and Valuesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The structured questionnaire comprised five sections that were designed based on previous studies [31] in order to analyze the beliefs regarding IK, IC, IP, and ISE of dairy product consumers. To ensure validity, a public health expert, a dietitian, and a health education expert were invited to give feedback.…”
Section: Questionnairementioning
confidence: 99%