Department of Human Geography and Spatial Planning, Faculty of Geosciences, Utrecht University, Princetonlaan 8a, 3584 CB, Utrecht, The Netherlands.
Amsterdam Public Health research institute, Department of Health Sciences, Faculty of Earth and Life Sciences, VU-University Amsterdam, De Boelelaan 1085, 1081 HV, Amsterdam, the Netherlands.
Int J Behav Nutr Phys Act. 2018 Jun 18;15(1):54. doi: 10.1186/s12966-018-0687-z.
Food literacy refers to the capability to make healthy food choices in different contexts, settings and situations. The aim of this study is to develop and validate the self-perceived food literacy (SPFL) scale, to assess individuals' level of food literacy, including a knowledge, skills and behavior to plan, manage, select, prepare and eat food healthfully.
An initial set of 50 items for the SPFL scale were generated based on expert insights and literature. A cross-sectional online survey was conducted among a sample of Dutch adults (n = 755) in order to determine convergent, divergent and criterion validation against psychosocial variables that were expected to correlate with food literacy (self-control, impulsiveness) and against the expected outcome of high food literacy, namely healthy food consumption. Principal Component Analyses (PCA), Pearson correlation tests and linear regression analyses were conducted. The capacity to distinguish of the SPFL scale was determined by comparing SPFL scores of the general population with that of a sample of dieticians (n = 207).
The participants in the general sample had an average age of 44.8 (SD:16.1), the majority were women (90.7%), they had a healthy weight (61.4%) and were highly educated (59.1%). Of the initial 50 items, 29 items remained after PCA and reflected eight domains of food literacy. SPFL was positively correlated with self-control (r = 0.51, p = <.001) and negatively with impulsiveness (r = - 0.31, p = <.01). Participants with higher levels of food literacy reported a significantly higher frequency of fruit consumption (≥5 times/week), vegetable consumption (≥5times/week) and fish consumption (≥1times/week) and consumed larger portions of fruit (≥2pieces/day) and vegetables ≥200 g/day) in comparison with participants who had lower levels of food literacy. Dieticians had slightly higher scores on SPFL than general adults (B = 0.08, SE = 0.03, t = 2.83, 95%-CI = 0.03 to 0.14).
The 29 item SPFL scale is a validated, expert-based and theory-driven tool for measuring self-perceived food literacy with respect to healthy eating among adults. Higher levels of food literacy were associated with more self-control, less impulsiveness and healthier food consumption. Additional research is needed to validate the SPFL scale in different populations (different age groups, socioeconomic groups, male populations) and in different contexts.
食品素养是指在不同背景、环境和情况下做出健康饮食选择的能力。本研究旨在开发和验证自我感知食品素养(SPFL)量表,以评估个体的食品素养水平,包括计划、管理、选择、准备和健康饮食的知识、技能和行为。
根据专家意见和文献,最初生成了 SPFL 量表的 50 个项目。通过对荷兰成年人(n=755)的横断面在线调查,确定了与食品素养相关的心理社会变量的收敛、发散和标准验证(自我控制、冲动),以及高食品素养的预期结果,即健康的食物消费。进行了主成分分析(PCA)、皮尔逊相关检验和线性回归分析。通过比较普通人群和营养师样本(n=207)的 SPFL 分数,确定了 SPFL 量表的区分能力。
普通样本的参与者平均年龄为 44.8(SD:16.1),大多数为女性(90.7%),体重健康(61.4%),教育程度较高(59.1%)。经过 PCA 后,最初的 50 个项目中有 29 个仍然存在,反映了食品素养的八个领域。SPFL 与自我控制呈正相关(r=0.51,p<.001),与冲动呈负相关(r=-0.31,p<.01)。自我感知食品素养水平较高的参与者报告水果(每周≥5 次)、蔬菜(每周≥5 次)和鱼类(每周≥1 次)的食用频率显著更高,并且水果(每天≥2 份)和蔬菜(每天≥200 克)的食用量更大,与自我感知食品素养水平较低的参与者相比。营养师在 SPFL 上的得分略高于普通成年人(B=0.08,SE=0.03,t=2.83,95%-CI=0.03 至 0.14)。
29 项 SPFL 量表是一种经过验证的、基于专家意见和理论驱动的工具,用于衡量成年人健康饮食方面的自我感知食品素养。较高的食品素养水平与更高的自我控制能力、更低的冲动性和更健康的食物消费相关。需要进一步研究来验证 SPFL 量表在不同人群(不同年龄组、社会经济群体、男性群体)和不同环境中的适用性。