Behavioral Research Program, Division of Cancer Control and Population Sciences, National Cancer Institute.
Health Psychol. 2019 Mar;38(3):268-275. doi: 10.1037/hea0000722.
Prior research has documented the influence of social norms on health-related behaviors, though social norms may affect behaviors in more complex ways than have conventionally been modeled. The present research evaluates parent norms and teens' own attitudes as moderators of associations between perceived peer norms and diet and physical activity behaviors (both health-promoting and health-impairing) in a national sample of U.S. adolescents.
Adolescent participants (N = 1,859; ages 12-17) from the 2014 Family Life, Activity, Sun, Health, and Eating study reported on the extent to which their friends eat fruits and vegetables; eat junk food or drink sugary drinks; exercise; and watch TV, play on the computer, or play electronic games most days of the week. They also reported on their own attitudes and behaviors as well as their parents' corresponding behaviors and rules.
Perceived peer norms were associated with teens' own health-promoting behaviors such as fruit and vegetable consumption and physical activity as well as health-impairing behaviors such as junk food consumption and sedentary habits. Teens who reported liking fruits and vegetables or physical activity or perceiving congruent descriptive parental norms demonstrated the strongest positive associations between peer norms and their own behavior.
Perceived social norms may play a significant role in both health-impairing and health-promoting behaviors, particularly when congruent with attitudes or descriptive parental norms about those behaviors. The findings may inform interventions such as social norms marketing campaigns that aim to change perceptions of peer norms for health-promoting behavior. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2019 APA, all rights reserved).
先前的研究记录了社会规范对与健康相关行为的影响,尽管社会规范对行为的影响可能比传统模型更为复杂。本研究评估了父母规范和青少年自身态度对感知同伴规范与饮食和体育活动行为(包括促进健康和损害健康的行为)之间关联的调节作用,该研究采用了美国青少年的全国性样本。
来自 2014 年家庭生活、活动、阳光、健康和饮食研究的青少年参与者(N=1859;年龄 12-17 岁)报告了他们的朋友吃水果和蔬菜的程度;吃垃圾食品或喝含糖饮料;锻炼;以及大多数日子看电视、玩电脑或玩电子游戏。他们还报告了自己的态度和行为,以及父母相应的行为和规则。
感知到的同伴规范与青少年自身的健康促进行为(如水果和蔬菜的消费和体育活动)以及损害健康的行为(如垃圾食品的消费和久坐习惯)有关。报告喜欢水果和蔬菜或喜欢体育活动或感知到一致的描述性父母规范的青少年,在同伴规范与其自身行为之间表现出最强的正相关。
感知到的社会规范可能在损害健康和促进健康的行为中都发挥重要作用,尤其是当这些规范与对这些行为的态度或描述性父母规范一致时。这些发现可能为旨在改变促进健康行为的同伴规范认知的干预措施(如社会规范营销活动)提供信息。(PsycINFO 数据库记录(c)2019 APA,保留所有权利)。