Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom.
J Med Internet Res. 2022 Dec 12;24(12):e37389. doi: 10.2196/37389.
There is an urgent need to reduce society's meat consumption to help mitigate climate change and reduce noncommunicable diseases.
This study aimed to investigate changes in meat intake after participation in an online, multicomponent, self-regulation intervention.
We conducted a pre-post observational study among adult meat eaters in the United Kingdom who signed up to a website offering support based on self-regulation theory to reduce meat consumption. The program lasted 9 weeks (including a 1-week baseline phase, a 4-week active intervention phase, and a 4-week maintenance phase), comprising self-monitoring, goal setting, action planning, and health and environmental feedback. Meat intake was estimated during weeks 1, 5, and 9 using a 7-day meat frequency questionnaire. We analyzed the change in mean daily meat intake from baseline to week 5 and week 9 among those reporting data using a hierarchical linear mixed model. We assessed changes in attitudes toward meat consumption by questionnaire and considered the acceptability and feasibility of the intervention.
The baseline cohort consisted of 289 participants, of whom 77 were analyzed at week 5 (26.6% of the baseline sample) and 55 at week 9 (71.4% of the week 5 sample). We observed large reductions in meat intake at 5 and 9 weeks: -57 (95% CI -70 to -43) g/day (P<.001) and -49 (95% CI -64 to -34) g/day (P<.001), respectively. Participants' meat-free self-efficacy increased, meat-eating identities moved toward reduced-meat and non-meat-eating identities, and perceptions of meat consumption as the social norm reduced. Participants who completed the study reported high engagement and satisfaction with the intervention.
Among people motivated to engage, this online self-regulation program may lead to large reductions in meat intake for more than 2 months, with promising signs of a change in meat-eating identity toward more plant-based diets. This digital behavior change intervention could be offered to complement population-level interventions to support reduction of meat consumption.
为了帮助缓解气候变化和减少非传染性疾病,减少社会的肉类消费已迫在眉睫。
本研究旨在调查参与在线多组分自我调节干预后肉类摄入量的变化。
我们在英国的成年肉食者中进行了一项前后观测研究,这些人注册了一个基于自我调节理论的网站,以减少肉类消费。该计划持续 9 周(包括 1 周的基线阶段、4 周的积极干预阶段和 4 周的维持阶段),包括自我监测、目标设定、行动计划以及健康和环境反馈。在第 1、5 和 9 周使用 7 天肉类频率问卷估计肉类摄入量。我们使用分层线性混合模型分析了从基线到第 5 周和第 9 周期间报告数据的参与者的平均每日肉类摄入量的变化。我们通过问卷评估了对肉类消费态度的变化,并考虑了干预措施的可接受性和可行性。
基线队列由 289 名参与者组成,其中 77 名在第 5 周(基线样本的 26.6%)进行了分析,55 名在第 9 周(第 5 周样本的 71.4%)进行了分析。我们观察到在第 5 和第 9 周肉类摄入量大幅减少:分别减少了-57(95%CI-70 至-43)g/天(P<.001)和-49(95%CI-64 至-34)g/天(P<.001)。参与者的无肉自我效能感增加,肉食身份向减少肉类和非肉食身份转变,对肉类消费作为社会规范的看法减少。完成研究的参与者报告说对干预措施的参与度和满意度很高。
在有动机参与的人群中,这种在线自我调节计划可能会导致 2 个多月来肉类摄入量的大幅减少,并且在朝着更以植物为基础的饮食改变肉食身份方面有了可喜的迹象。这种数字行为改变干预措施可以提供补充人群干预措施,以支持减少肉类消费。