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Associations between neighbourhood and household environmental variables and fruit consumption : exploration of mediation by individual cognitions and habit strength in the GLOBE study

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journal contribution
posted on 2013-03-01, 00:00 authored by N Tak, S te Velde, C Kamphuis, Kylie BallKylie Ball, David CrawfordDavid Crawford, J Brug, F van Lenthe
Objective The present study examined associations of several home and neighbourhood environmental variables with fruit consumption and explored whether these associations were mediated by variables derived from the Theory of Planned Behaviour (TPB) and by habit strength.

Design Data of the Dutch GLOBE study on household and neighbourhood environment, fruit intake and related factors were used, obtained by self-administered questionnaires (cross-sectional), face-to-face interviews and audits.

Setting
The city of Eindhoven in the Netherlands

Subjects
Adults (n 333; mean age 58 years, 54 % female).

Results
Multiple mediation analyses were conducted using regression analyses to assess the association between environmental variables and fruit consumption, as well as mediation of these associations by TPB variables and by habit strength. Intention, perceived behaviour control, subjective norm and habit strength were associated with fruit intake. None of the neighbourhood environmental variables was directly or indirectly associated with fruit intake. The home environmental variable ‘modelling behaviour by family members’ was indirectly, but not directly, associated with fruit intake. Habit strength and perceived behaviour control explained most of the mediated effect (71·9 %).

Conclusions
Modelling behaviour by family members was indirectly associated with fruit intake through habit strength and perceived behaviour control. None of the neighbourhood variables was directly or indirectly, through any of the proposed mediators, associated with adult fruit intake. These findings suggest that future interventions promoting fruit intake should address a combination of the home environment (especially modelling behaviour by family members), TPB variables and habit strength for fruit intake.

History

Journal

Public health nutrition

Volume

16

Issue

3

Pagination

505 - 514

Publisher

Cambridge Unviersity Press

Location

Cambridge, England

ISSN

1368-9800

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2013, Cambridge University Press