Department of Marketing, Vlerick Business School, Vlamingenstraat 83, 3000, Leuven, Belgium.
School of Business and Technology Management, Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST), 291 Daehak-ro, Yuseong-gu, Daejeon, 34141, Republic of Korea.
Appetite. 2020 Jul 1;150:104639. doi: 10.1016/j.appet.2020.104639. Epub 2020 Feb 22.
Obesity is one of the greatest public health challenges of modern times and its prevalence is increasing worldwide. With food so abundant in developed countries, many people face a conflict between desires for short-term taste and the goal of long-term health, multiple times a day. Recent research suggests that consumers often resolve these conflicts based on their lay beliefs about the healthiness and tastiness of food. Consequently, such lay beliefs can play critical roles not just in food choice but also weight gain. In this research, we show, across six countries and through mediation analysis, that adults who believe that tasty food is unhealthy (the Unhealthy = Tasty Intuition, or "UTI"; Raghunathan, Naylor, & Hoyer 2006) are less likely to consume healthy food, and thereby have a higher body mass index (BMI). In Study 1, we conducted a cross-sectional survey in five countries (Australia, Germany, Hong Kong, India, and the UK), and found that greater strength of belief in UTI was associated with higher BMI, and this relationship was mediated by lower consumption of fruits and vegetables. The observed patterns largely converged across the sampled Western and Asian-Pacific countries. In Study 2, we teased apart the mediating role of vegetable versus fruit consumption and also addressed the issue of reversed causality by predicting BMI with a measure of UTI belief taken 30 months previously. We found that vegetable consumption, but not fruit consumption, mediated the association between UTI belief and BMI. Our findings contribute to the literature by showing how lay beliefs about food can have pervasive and long-lasting effects on dietary practices and health worldwide. Implications for public policy and health practitioners are discussed.
肥胖是现代社会面临的最大公共健康挑战之一,其发病率在全球范围内呈上升趋势。在发达国家,食物如此丰富,许多人每天都面临着短期口感和长期健康目标之间的冲突。最近的研究表明,消费者经常根据自己对食物健康和美味的直观信念来解决这些冲突。因此,这些直观信念不仅在食物选择中而且在体重增加中都起着至关重要的作用。在这项研究中,我们通过六项研究和中介分析表明,那些认为美味的食物不健康的成年人(不健康=美味直觉,或“UTI”;Raghunathan、Naylor 和 Hoyer,2006)不太可能食用健康食品,从而导致体重指数(BMI)更高。在研究 1 中,我们在五个国家(澳大利亚、德国、中国香港、印度和英国)进行了横断面调查,发现 UTI 信念越强,BMI 越高,这种关系是通过降低水果和蔬菜的摄入量来介导的。观察到的模式在抽样的西方和亚太国家中基本一致。在研究 2 中,我们通过预测 BMI 与 30 个月前的 UTI 信念测量值之间的关系,进一步探讨了蔬菜和水果摄入量的中介作用以及反向因果关系的问题。我们发现,蔬菜的摄入量而非水果的摄入量,介导了 UTI 信念与 BMI 之间的关联。我们的研究结果通过表明关于食物的直观信念如何对全球范围内的饮食实践和健康产生普遍而持久的影响,为文献做出了贡献。讨论了对公共政策和健康从业者的影响。