Key healthy food messages are giving Australian adolescents clear boundaries to set core beliefs and moral decisions about ethical eating choices and junk food risks—which even paves the way for raising their sense of self-worth, a Flinders University study has found.
The in-depth study of the attitudes of 27 high school students from different socioeconomic backgrounds found they were generally well aware of setting their own goals and opinions about healthy eating.
The study analyzed feedback from 27 South Australian youth aged 12 to 17 on their beliefs and perceptions about healthy eating from a moral and symbolic moral boundary perspective.
“This study is a good sign, since food choices established during childhood and adolescence lay the foundations for dietary habits into adulthood,” the Flinders research team say.
“In the past we may have assumed that some less advantaged children had more unhealthy diets, however this might not be the case,” says Christopher Bailey, whose Ph.D. is exploring adolescents’ perspectives of food literacy and healthy eating.
“But these findings suggest Australian adolescents from a range of backgrounds do and can be engaged in beliefs and perceptions about food, including ethical eating and sustainable food production.
“Healthy food messages clearly hold more of a symbolic meaning than just its nutritional or calorific content, so this study can help policymakers and school canteens develop effective healthy lifestyle programs.”
“With less than 10% of young Australians between age two and 17 years meeting national recommended guidelines for the number of serves of both fruit and vegetables (ABS 2018), it’s a great sign that teenagers are actively setting their own standards to adhere to a healthy diet,” says co-author Professor Murray Drummond.
“We found a cohort of teenagers, regardless of their family’s food practices, looking to set their own healthy agenda—possibly for life,” he says.
The Flinders study also found participants were also interested in increasing their food literacy and the impact of dietary behaviors on animal welfare and environmental sustainability.
“They shared considerable agreement with the dominant discourse of what constitutes healthy and ethical eating beliefs,” the research concludes.
“Food literacy and nutrition educators should focus on the moral and symbolic meanings that adolescents attach to food and towards health and food sustainability to change dietary behavior.”
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