Faculty of Land and Food Systems, Food, Nutrition and Health, the University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.
PERFORM Centre, Concordia University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
PLoS One. 2023 Nov 28;18(11):e0294652. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0294652. eCollection 2023.
Dietary self-monitoring is a behaviour change technique used to help elicit and sustain dietary changes over time. Current dietary self-monitoring tools focus primarily on itemizing foods and counting calories, which can be complex, time-intensive, and dependent on health literacy. Further, there are no dietary self-monitoring tools that conform to the plate-based approach of the 2019 Canada Food Guide (CFG), wherein the recommended proportions of three food groups are visually represented on a plate without specifying daily servings or portion sizes. This paper explored the perceptions of end-users (i.e., general public) and Registered Dietitians of iCANPlateTM-a dietary self-monitoring mobile application resembling the CFG. Qualitative data were collected through virtual focus groups. Focus group questions were based on the Capability, Opportunity, Motivation-Behaviour (COM-B) theoretical framework to explore perceptions of using the CFG and currently available dietary self-monitoring tools. The prototype iCANPlateTM (version 0.1) was presented to gain feedback on perceived barriers and facilitators of its use. Focus group discussions were audio recorded and verbatim transcribed. Trained researchers used thematic analysis to code and analyze the transcripts independently. Seven focus groups were conducted with Registered Dietitians (n = 44) and nine focus groups with members from the general public (n = 52). During the focus groups, participants mainly discussed the capabilities and opportunities required to use the current iteration of iCANPlateTM. Participants liked the simplicity of the application and its capacity to foster self-awareness of dietary behaviours rather than weight control or calorie counting. However, concerns were raised regarding iCANPlateTM's potential to improve adherence to dietary self-monitoring due to specific characteristics (i.e., insufficient classifications, difficulty in conceptualizing proportions, and lack of inclusivity). Overall, participants liked the simplicity of iCANPlateTM and its ability to promote self-awareness of dietary intakes, primarily through visual representation of foods on a plate as opposed to reliance on numerical values or serving sizes, were benefits of using the app. Findings from this study will be used to further develop the app with the goal of increasing adherence to plate-based dietary approaches.
饮食自我监测是一种行为改变技术,用于帮助随着时间的推移引出和维持饮食变化。目前的饮食自我监测工具主要侧重于逐项列出食物和计算卡路里,这可能很复杂、耗时且依赖于健康素养。此外,没有符合 2019 年加拿大食品指南(CFG)基于餐盘的饮食自我监测工具,CFG 中通过不指定每日份量或份量大小,而是在餐盘上直观地呈现三种食物组的建议比例,来代表推荐比例。本文探讨了最终用户(即普通公众)和注册营养师对 iCANPlateTM 的看法,这是一种类似于 CFG 的饮食自我监测移动应用程序。通过虚拟焦点小组收集定性数据。焦点小组问题基于能力、机会、动机-行为(COM-B)理论框架,以探讨使用 CFG 和当前可用的饮食自我监测工具的看法。呈现原型 iCANPlateTM(版本 0.1)以获取有关其使用的感知障碍和促进因素的反馈。焦点小组讨论进行了录音,并逐字记录。经过培训的研究人员使用主题分析对转录本进行独立编码和分析。共进行了 7 次注册营养师焦点小组(n=44)和 9 次普通公众焦点小组(n=52)。在焦点小组讨论中,参与者主要讨论了使用当前迭代版 iCANPlateTM 所需的能力和机会。参与者喜欢该应用程序的简单性及其促进对饮食行为的自我意识的能力,而不是控制体重或计算卡路里。然而,人们对 iCANPlateTM 提高饮食自我监测依从性的潜力表示担忧,原因是其具有特定特征(即分类不足、难以概念化比例以及缺乏包容性)。总的来说,参与者喜欢 iCANPlateTM 的简单性及其能够通过在餐盘上直观地呈现食物来促进对饮食摄入的自我意识,而不是依赖数值或份量大小,这是使用该应用程序的好处。本研究的结果将用于进一步开发该应用程序,旨在提高对基于餐盘的饮食方法的依从性。