Psychological Factors in Preventive Nutrition: A Longitudinal Study Freie Universität Berlin, FB 12 Institut für Arbeits-, Organisations- und Gesundheitspsychologie, WE 10 (16 bit high color and 800 x 600 resolution requested) |
The present study was designed to predict nutrition behavior half a year after a medical and psychological screening had taken place. Based on 315 participants with complete data at two measurement points in time, the intention to change ones diet and eating behavior were chosen as dependent variables, whereas risk perception, outcome expectancies, and perceived self-efficacy served as predictors within a structural equatition model. |
Eating a healthy diet with low
levels of sodium and fat is a popular medical recommendation. Such a nutrition may help to
prevent cardiovascular diseases and other aliments. However, most individuals do not
adhere to this health behavior, and many have not even developed an explicit intention to
adopt it. Health
behavior theories describe and explain how and why individuals refrain from risk behavior
and adopt health behavior instead. One such theory is the Health
Action Process Approach (HAPA; Schwarzer, 1992; Schwarzer & Fuchs, 1996), which
suggests that a distinction should be made between preintentional motivation processes and
postintentional volition processes. Thus, there are at least two distinct phases: one
leading to a goal or intention, and one to actual behavior. With both phases, different
social-cognitive processes influence the way people became motivated and turn to action
(cf. Figure 1). |
Figure 1. The Health Action Process Approach.
The Berlin Risk Appraisal and Health Motivation
Study (BRAHMS) was conducted by André Hahn,
Britta Renner und Thomas von Lengerke
under the supervision of Ralf Schwarzer
(Renner & Lengerke, 1996). It comprised two measurement points in time, one in April
one in October. Participants responded to a set of psychometric scales including the three
predictors, and their blood pressure and cholesterol level were measured. These indices
were used for a brief health counseling session. The treatment consisted of personalized
feedback and individual face-to-face counseling. Half a year later behavioral indices were
assessed. The longitudinal sample comprised 621 persons. The present analysis is based on 325 participants with complete data, of whom 38% were employed, 16% jobless, 25% students, and 17% retired. The age ranged from 17 to 76 years, with a mean of 44.5 years. Of the participants, 47% were woman. |
To examine the associations between the variables, a structural equatition approach was chosen. Six latent variables were specified, with two manifest variables (indicators) each: risk perception, outcome expectancy, perceived self-efficacy, intention, sausages consumption and nutrition habits. The first three were specified as predictors of the intention. The intention itself, along with perceived self-efficacy, was specified as a predictor of the two behavior latent variables at the second measurement point in time. |
The structural model as outlined in Figure 2 fit
the data well (c ² = 68.27; df = 44; RMSEA =
0.042; AGFI = .94). Within the motivation phase, the
intention was predicted substantially by outcome expectancies (b
= .51), perceived self-efficacy (b = .32), and risk perception
(b = .21), as hypotesized. These three predictors accounted for
52% of the intention variance.
Within the voliton phase, different patterns of prediction
appeared for the two endogenous variables that pertain to nutrition behavior. The
intention was very closely associated with subsequent nutrition habits (b = .76) and sausages consumption (b =
.46). Perceived self-efficacy, on the other hand, was not at all related to sausages
consumption (b = .01), and only weakly to nutrition habits b = .19). |
Figure 2. Strutural equation model.
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