School of Public Health, The University of Queensland, 288 Herston Road, Herston, QLD, 4006, Australia.
School of Public Health and Social Work, The Queensland University of Technology, GPO Box 2434, Brisbane, QLD, 4001, Australia.
Appetite. 2021 Jun 1;161:105130. doi: 10.1016/j.appet.2021.105130. Epub 2021 Jan 21.
COVID-19 triggered widespread disruption in the lives of university students across the United States. We conducted 9 online focus groups with 30 students from a large public university to understand the impact of COVID-19 on the food choices of those displaced from their typical residences due to the pandemic. To the authors' knowledge, this is the first qualitative research to examine the changes in food choice for US university students due to COVID-19 and offer insight into why these changes occurred. Students in this study reported significant, and often negative, changes in food choices during the pandemic compared to when on campus. Many students described changes in the foods they ate, the amount consumed, and increased snacking behaviors. We found food availability and household roles to be powerful factors influencing food choices. Most students had returned to family homes with many students taking a passive role in activities that shape food choices. Parents usually purchased groceries and prepared meals with students eating foods made available to them. Increased free time contributed to boredom and snacking for some students, while for a few students with increased skills and/or agency, additional free time was used to plan and prepare meals. About a third of the students attributed eating different foods at home to food availability issues related to the pandemic such as groceries being out of stock, purchasing non-perishable foods, or the inability to get to a store. This information may be helpful to researchers and health promotion professionals interested in the effects of COVID-19 on student nutrition and related food behaviors, including those interested in the relationship between context and food choice.
COVID-19 在美国大学生的生活中引发了广泛的混乱。我们对一所大型公立大学的 30 名学生进行了 9 次在线焦点小组讨论,以了解由于大流行而从典型住所搬离的学生的食物选择受到 COVID-19 的影响。据作者所知,这是第一项针对美国大学生因 COVID-19 而改变食物选择的定性研究,并深入了解了这些变化发生的原因。与在校时相比,本研究中的学生报告说,他们在大流行期间的食物选择发生了重大变化,而且往往是负面的。许多学生描述了他们所吃食物的变化、摄入量的变化以及增加了零食行为。我们发现食物的可得性和家庭角色是影响食物选择的重要因素。大多数学生已经回到了家庭住所,许多学生在塑造食物选择的活动中处于被动角色。父母通常购买杂货并准备饭菜,学生则吃提供给他们的食物。对于一些学生来说,额外的空闲时间导致了无聊和零食,而对于一些技能和/或能力有所提高的学生来说,额外的空闲时间则用于计划和准备饭菜。大约三分之一的学生将在家中食用不同的食物归因于与大流行有关的食物可得性问题,例如杂货缺货、购买不易腐坏的食物或无法去商店。这些信息可能对那些对 COVID-19 对学生营养和相关食物行为的影响感兴趣的研究人员和健康促进专业人员有用,包括那些对背景和食物选择之间关系感兴趣的人员。