首页> 外文期刊>BMC Public Health >A qualitative study of the drivers of socioeconomic inequalities in men’s eating behaviours
【24h】

A qualitative study of the drivers of socioeconomic inequalities in men’s eating behaviours

机译:男子饮食行为的社会经济不等式驱动权的定性研究

获取原文
           

摘要

Men of low socioeconomic position (SEP) are less likely than those of higher SEP to consume fruits and vegetables, and more likely to eat processed discretionary foods. Education level is a widely used marker of SEP. Few studies have explored determinants of socioeconomic inequalities in men's eating behaviours. The present study aimed to explore intrapersonal, social and environmental factors potentially contributing to educational inequalities in men's eating behaviour. Thirty Australian men aged 18-60?years (15 each with tertiary or non-tertiary education) from two large metropolitan sites (Melbourne, Victoria; and Newcastle, New South Wales) participated in qualitative, semi-structured, one-on-one telephone interviews about their perceptions of influences on their and other men's eating behaviours. The social ecological model informed interview question development, and data were examined using abductive thematic analysis. Themes equally salient across tertiary and non-tertiary educated groups included attitudes about masculinity; nutrition knowledge and awareness; 'moralising' consumption of certain foods; the influence of children on eating; availability of healthy foods; convenience; and the interplay between cost, convenience, taste and healthfulness when choosing foods. More prominent influences among tertiary educated men included using advanced cooking skills but having relatively infrequent involvement in other food-related tasks; the influence of partner/spouse support on eating; access to healthy food; and cost. More predominant influences among non-tertiary educated men included having fewer cooking skills but frequent involvement in food-related tasks; identifying that 'no-one' influenced their diet; having mobile worksites; and adhering to food budgets. This study identified key similarities and differences in perceived influences on eating behaviours among men with lower and higher education levels. Further research is needed to determine the extent to which such influences explain socioeconomic variations in men's dietary intakes, and to identify feasible strategies that might support healthy eating among men in different socioeconomic groups.
机译:低社会经济地位(SEP)的男性不太可能比早期的患者消耗水果和蔬菜,而且更有可能吃加工的自由裁量食物。教育水平是一种广泛使用的SEP标记。少数研究已经探索了男子饮食行为中的社会经济不平等的决定因素。本研究旨在探讨潜在的内在,社会和环境因素,可能导致男性饮食行为的教育不平等。三十澳大利亚男子年龄在18-60岁以下?几年(15名与高等教育或非高等教育)来自两个大都市网站(墨尔本,维多利亚州;和纽卡斯尔,新南威尔士州)参与了定性,半结构一对一电话采访他们对他们和其他男性的饮食行为的影响的看法。社会生态模型通知面试问题开发,并使用绑架专题分析检查数据。跨第三节和非高等教育群体同样突出的主题包括阳刚之气的态度;营养知识和意识; '道德化'消费某些食物;儿童对饮食的影响;健康食品的可用性;方便;在选择食物时,成本,便利性,品味和健康之间的相互作用。在三级教育男性中更加突出的影响,包括使用先进的烹饪技能,但在其他与其他食物相关的任务中相对不常参与;合作伙伴/配偶支持对饮食的影响;进入健康食品;和成本。非高等教育男性之间的影响更多,包括较少的烹饪技能,但经常参与与食物有关的任务;确定“没有人”影响他们的饮食;拥有移动工资;并遵守食品预算。本研究确定了对具有较低教育水平和高等教育水平的男性饮食行为的关键相似性和差异。需要进一步的研究来确定这种影响的程度解释了男性膳食摄入量的社会经济变化,并确定了可能支持不同社会经济群体中男性健康饮食的可行策略。

著录项

相似文献

  • 外文文献
  • 中文文献
  • 专利
获取原文

客服邮箱:kefu@zhangqiaokeyan.com

京公网安备:11010802029741号 ICP备案号:京ICP备15016152号-6 六维联合信息科技 (北京) 有限公司©版权所有
  • 客服微信

  • 服务号