Lessons learned from talking with adults about nutrition: a qualitative study in the PREPARED project
Lessons learned from talking with adults about nutrition: a qualitative study in the PREPARED project
Improving diet and dietary behaviour of men and women before pregnancy has the potential to benefit both their current and long-term health and the health of their children. Little is known, however, about adults' perception of diet's role in prepregnancy health. This study aimed to explore the state of knowledge and awareness of preconception nutritional health in adults within the fertile age range and what they perceived could motivate healthy eating using the self-determination theory as a theoretical framework. We analysed 33 short exploratory interviews with men (n = 18) and women (n = 15) aged 18-45 years. Participants were grab sampled from three different public locations in the southern part of Norway. Interviews were audio-recorded, transcribed verbatim in 2020 and analysed using a thematic analysis with a semantic approach in 2022. The findings suggest that adults within the fertile age range are not intrinsically motivated to eat healthily, but when they do, it is because eating healthily often aligns with other goals consistent with their values, that is, getting fit or looking good. They possess some basic knowledge of healthy behaviours during pregnancy but are generally unaware of the importance of preconception health and nutrition. There is a need to increase awareness of the impact of preconception health on the health of this and future generations. Improved nutritional education on the significance of diet before conception might facilitate optimal conditions for conceiving and for pregnancy in the adult population within fertile age range.
behaviour, maternal nutrition, nutrition, paternal nutrition, preconception nutrition, public health, qualitative methods
Valen, Erlend N.
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Øverby, Nina Cecilie
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Hardy-Johnson, Polly
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Vik, Frøydis N.
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Salvesen, Lorentz
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Omholt, Mona L.
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Barker, Mary Elizabeth
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Hillesund, Elisabet R.
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January 2024
Valen, Erlend N.
345dcbae-d093-4168-8d6b-c1d5d47e4258
Øverby, Nina Cecilie
4e7dbd40-aa5b-4a47-87f3-cb5f73f27a89
Hardy-Johnson, Polly
49276c2f-01a9-4488-9f30-dc359cf867e0
Vik, Frøydis N.
c36b129d-b54f-42a7-b005-155bdfe14a16
Salvesen, Lorentz
cdd9a705-e20a-4403-9b88-392ff8266362
Omholt, Mona L.
8aa8c404-3714-420b-8a3a-a695ae203933
Barker, Mary Elizabeth
374310ad-d308-44af-b6da-515bf5d2d6d2
Hillesund, Elisabet R.
056fa42b-52a5-493a-915d-3b5230005351
Valen, Erlend N., Øverby, Nina Cecilie, Hardy-Johnson, Polly, Vik, Frøydis N., Salvesen, Lorentz, Omholt, Mona L., Barker, Mary Elizabeth and Hillesund, Elisabet R.
(2024)
Lessons learned from talking with adults about nutrition: a qualitative study in the PREPARED project.
Maternal & Child Nutrition, 20 (S2), [e13540].
(doi:10.1111/mcn.13540).
Abstract
Improving diet and dietary behaviour of men and women before pregnancy has the potential to benefit both their current and long-term health and the health of their children. Little is known, however, about adults' perception of diet's role in prepregnancy health. This study aimed to explore the state of knowledge and awareness of preconception nutritional health in adults within the fertile age range and what they perceived could motivate healthy eating using the self-determination theory as a theoretical framework. We analysed 33 short exploratory interviews with men (n = 18) and women (n = 15) aged 18-45 years. Participants were grab sampled from three different public locations in the southern part of Norway. Interviews were audio-recorded, transcribed verbatim in 2020 and analysed using a thematic analysis with a semantic approach in 2022. The findings suggest that adults within the fertile age range are not intrinsically motivated to eat healthily, but when they do, it is because eating healthily often aligns with other goals consistent with their values, that is, getting fit or looking good. They possess some basic knowledge of healthy behaviours during pregnancy but are generally unaware of the importance of preconception health and nutrition. There is a need to increase awareness of the impact of preconception health on the health of this and future generations. Improved nutritional education on the significance of diet before conception might facilitate optimal conditions for conceiving and for pregnancy in the adult population within fertile age range.
Text
Maternal Child Nutrition - 2023 - Valen - Lessons learned from talking with adults about nutrition A qualitative study
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Accepted/In Press date: 19 May 2023
e-pub ahead of print date: 5 June 2023
Published date: January 2024
Additional Information:
Funding Information:
The authors received no funding from outside the University of Agder. Award Number: 1325 Lifecourse Nutrition, UiA. The University of Agder had no role in study design, data collection, data analysis, or interpretation of data, nor any role in writing the paper or deciding where to submit it for publication.
Funding Information:
The authors received no funding from outside the University of Agder. Award Number: 1325 Lifecourse Nutrition, UiA. The University of Agder had no role in study design, data collection, data analysis, or interpretation of data, nor any role in writing the paper or deciding where to submit it for publication.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 The Authors. Maternal & Child Nutrition published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
Keywords:
behaviour, maternal nutrition, nutrition, paternal nutrition, preconception nutrition, public health, qualitative methods
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Local EPrints ID: 478783
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/478783
ISSN: 1740-8695
PURE UUID: 1b9b49e9-7d61-4d20-870c-f1b249e74e13
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Date deposited: 10 Jul 2023 16:42
Last modified: 21 Mar 2024 02:55
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Contributors
Author:
Erlend N. Valen
Author:
Nina Cecilie Øverby
Author:
Polly Hardy-Johnson
Author:
Frøydis N. Vik
Author:
Lorentz Salvesen
Author:
Mona L. Omholt
Author:
Elisabet R. Hillesund
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