Health Behaviour Research Centre, Department of Epidemiology and Public Health, University College London, Gower Street, London WC1E 6BT, UK.
Public Health Nutr. 2012 Sep;15(9):1678-82. doi: 10.1017/S1368980012000328. Epub 2012 Mar 14.
Misperception of social norms may result in normalising unhealthy behaviours. The present study tested the hypothesis that parents overestimate both the frequency of unhealthy snacking in pre-school children other than their own (descriptive norms) and its acceptability to other parents (injunctive norms).
A cross-sectional, self-report community survey. Questions assessed the frequency with which respondents' own child ate unhealthy snacks and their beliefs about the appropriate frequency for children to snack. Perceived descriptive norms were assessed by asking parents to estimate how often other 2-4 year-old children in their area ate snacks. Perceived injunctive norms were assessed by asking them about other parents' beliefs regarding the appropriate frequency for snacks. Misperceptions were assessed from (i) the difference between the prevalence of daily snacking and parents' perceived prevalence and (ii) the difference between acceptability of daily snacking and parents' beliefs about its acceptability to others.
Pre-schools and children's centres in one borough of London, UK.
Parents (n 432) of children age 2-4 years.
On average, parents believed that more than half of 'other' children had snacks at least daily, while prevalence data indicated this occurred in only 10 % of families. The same discrepancy was observed for perceived injunctive norms: parents overestimated other parents' acceptance of frequent snacking, with two-thirds of parents having a self v. others discrepancy.
Misperceptions were identified for descriptive and injunctive norms for children's snacking. Accurate information could create less permissive norms and motivate parents to limit their child's intake of unhealthy snacks.
对社会规范的误解可能导致不健康行为正常化。本研究检验了以下假设,即父母高估了除自己孩子以外的学龄前儿童食用不健康零食的频率(描述性规范)和其他父母对其的接受程度(指令性规范)。
一项横断面、自我报告的社区调查。问题评估了受访者自己的孩子吃不健康零食的频率以及他们对孩子适当零食频率的看法。通过询问父母估计他们所在地区其他 2-4 岁儿童吃零食的频率来评估感知的描述性规范。通过询问他们对其他父母关于零食适当频率的看法来评估感知的指令性规范。误解通过以下两种方式进行评估:(i) 每日吃零食的流行率与父母感知的流行率之间的差异和 (ii) 每日吃零食的可接受性与父母认为他人对其可接受性之间的差异。
英国伦敦一个行政区的幼儿园和儿童中心。
2-4 岁儿童的父母(n=432)。
平均而言,父母认为超过一半的“其他”孩子至少每天都有零食,而流行数据表明只有 10%的家庭存在这种情况。对于感知到的指令性规范也观察到了相同的差异:父母高估了其他父母对频繁吃零食的接受程度,三分之二的父母在自我与他人之间存在差异。
对儿童零食的描述性和指令性规范存在误解。准确的信息可以形成更不宽容的规范,并促使父母限制孩子摄入不健康的零食。