Country-level sociocultural context and socioeconomic inequalities in adolescent dietary behaviours : a multilevel analysis in 21 European countries
- Author
- Maxim Dierckens (UGent) , Benedicte Deforche (UGent) , Bart De Clercq, Dominic Weinberg, Gonneke W.J.M. Stevens, Angeline Chatelan, Manon Rouche, Els Clays (UGent) and Katrijn Delaruelle (UGent)
- Organization
- Project
- Abstract
- Studies to date have predominantly focused on countries' socioeconomic conditions (e.g., income inequality) to explain cross-national differences in socioeconomic inequalities in adolescent health (behaviours). However, the potential explanatory role of sociocultural contexts at country-level remains underexamined. This study examined whether the country-level sociocultural context and changes thereof were associated with adolescent socioeconomic inequalities in dietary behaviours. International comparative data of 344,352 adolescents living in 21 countries participating in 2002, 2006, 2010 and 2014 waves of the Health Behaviour in School-aged Children (HBSC) survey were combined with aggregated levels of openness-to-change from the European Social Survey (ESS). Four dietary behaviours (i.e., fruit, vegetable, sweets and soft drink consumption) and two measures of socioeconomic status (SES) on the individual level (i.e., family affluence scale [FAS] and occupational social class [OSC]) were studied. Multilevel logistic regression analyses returned contrasting results for the two SES measures used. In countries with higher levels of openness-to-change, smaller FAS inequalities in daily fruit, sweets and soft drink consumption were observed, but no such inequalities were found for vegetable consumption. Conversely, in these countries, larger OSC inequalities in soft drink consumption were found. Country-specific changes in openness-to-change over time were not associated with the magnitude of adolescent dietary inequalities. Findings underscore the importance of including country-level sociocultural contexts to improve the understanding of cross-national differences in socioeconomic inequalities in adolescents’ diets. Future studies, spanning a longer timeframe, are required to examine whether such associations exist within countries over time since our timeframe might have been too small to capture these long-term trends.
- Keywords
- Youth, Eating behaviour, Socioeconomic status, Health inequalities, Multilevel regression analysis, HEALTH BEHAVIOR, CULTURAL-VALUES, CONSUMPTION, FRUIT, STABILITY, POSITION, TRENDS
Downloads
-
Revised manuscript Appetite clean.docx
- full text (Accepted manuscript)
- |
- open access
- |
- Word
- |
- 166.93 KB
-
(...).pdf
- full text (Published version)
- |
- UGent only
- |
- |
- 1.33 MB
Citation
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication: http://hdl.handle.net/1854/LU-01HV42QB55NQGVZWPJE2891GFG
- MLA
- Dierckens, Maxim, et al. “Country-Level Sociocultural Context and Socioeconomic Inequalities in Adolescent Dietary Behaviours : A Multilevel Analysis in 21 European Countries.” APPETITE, vol. 198, 2024, doi:10.1016/j.appet.2024.107339.
- APA
- Dierckens, M., Deforche, B., De Clercq, B., Weinberg, D., W.J.M. Stevens, G., Chatelan, A., … Delaruelle, K. (2024). Country-level sociocultural context and socioeconomic inequalities in adolescent dietary behaviours : a multilevel analysis in 21 European countries. APPETITE, 198. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.appet.2024.107339
- Chicago author-date
- Dierckens, Maxim, Benedicte Deforche, Bart De Clercq, Dominic Weinberg, Gonneke W.J.M. Stevens, Angeline Chatelan, Manon Rouche, Els Clays, and Katrijn Delaruelle. 2024. “Country-Level Sociocultural Context and Socioeconomic Inequalities in Adolescent Dietary Behaviours : A Multilevel Analysis in 21 European Countries.” APPETITE 198. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.appet.2024.107339.
- Chicago author-date (all authors)
- Dierckens, Maxim, Benedicte Deforche, Bart De Clercq, Dominic Weinberg, Gonneke W.J.M. Stevens, Angeline Chatelan, Manon Rouche, Els Clays, and Katrijn Delaruelle. 2024. “Country-Level Sociocultural Context and Socioeconomic Inequalities in Adolescent Dietary Behaviours : A Multilevel Analysis in 21 European Countries.” APPETITE 198. doi:10.1016/j.appet.2024.107339.
- Vancouver
- 1.Dierckens M, Deforche B, De Clercq B, Weinberg D, W.J.M. Stevens G, Chatelan A, et al. Country-level sociocultural context and socioeconomic inequalities in adolescent dietary behaviours : a multilevel analysis in 21 European countries. APPETITE. 2024;198.
- IEEE
- [1]M. Dierckens et al., “Country-level sociocultural context and socioeconomic inequalities in adolescent dietary behaviours : a multilevel analysis in 21 European countries,” APPETITE, vol. 198, 2024.
@article{01HV42QB55NQGVZWPJE2891GFG,
abstract = {{Studies to date have predominantly focused on countries' socioeconomic conditions (e.g., income inequality) to explain cross-national differences in socioeconomic inequalities in adolescent health (behaviours). However, the potential explanatory role of sociocultural contexts at country-level remains underexamined. This study examined whether the country-level sociocultural context and changes thereof were associated with adolescent socioeconomic inequalities in dietary behaviours. International comparative data of 344,352 adolescents living in 21 countries participating in 2002, 2006, 2010 and 2014 waves of the Health Behaviour in School-aged Children (HBSC) survey were combined with aggregated levels of openness-to-change from the European Social Survey (ESS). Four dietary behaviours (i.e., fruit, vegetable, sweets and soft drink consumption) and two measures of socioeconomic status (SES) on the individual level (i.e., family affluence scale [FAS] and occupational social class [OSC]) were studied. Multilevel logistic regression analyses returned contrasting results for the two SES measures used. In countries with higher levels of openness-to-change, smaller FAS inequalities in daily fruit, sweets and soft drink consumption were observed, but no such inequalities were found for vegetable consumption. Conversely, in these countries, larger OSC inequalities in soft drink consumption were found. Country-specific changes in openness-to-change over time were not associated with the magnitude of adolescent dietary inequalities. Findings underscore the importance of including country-level sociocultural contexts to improve the understanding of cross-national differences in socioeconomic inequalities in adolescents’ diets. Future studies, spanning a longer timeframe, are required to examine whether such associations exist within countries over time since our timeframe might have been too small to capture these long-term trends.}},
articleno = {{107339}},
author = {{Dierckens, Maxim and Deforche, Benedicte and De Clercq, Bart and Weinberg, Dominic and W.J.M. Stevens, Gonneke and Chatelan, Angeline and Rouche, Manon and Clays, Els and Delaruelle, Katrijn}},
issn = {{0195-6663}},
journal = {{APPETITE}},
keywords = {{Youth,Eating behaviour,Socioeconomic status,Health inequalities,Multilevel regression analysis,HEALTH BEHAVIOR,CULTURAL-VALUES,CONSUMPTION,FRUIT,STABILITY,POSITION,TRENDS}},
language = {{eng}},
pages = {{9}},
title = {{Country-level sociocultural context and socioeconomic inequalities in adolescent dietary behaviours : a multilevel analysis in 21 European countries}},
url = {{http://doi.org/10.1016/j.appet.2024.107339}},
volume = {{198}},
year = {{2024}},
}
- Altmetric
- View in Altmetric
- Web of Science
- Times cited: