Knowledge of and attitudes towards vegan and vegetarian diets amongst students at a university located in rural Poland.

IF 1.4 Q3 NUTRITION & DIETETICS
Agnieszka Panasiuk, Kamil K Hozyasz
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Abstract

Background: Healthy plant-based diets, such as vegan and vegetarian diets, as well as planetary health diets, meet the recommendations of sustainable dietary patterns and are healthier for both the planet and humans. The adoption of these dietary patterns may depend on socio-demographic factors and individual motivations. Aim: This study aimed to analyse the association between socio-demographic factors and knowledge and attitudes towards vegan and vegetarian diets amongst university students. Methods: This anonymous survey included 241 students from a university in rural Poland. The association between respondents' socio-demographic factors and the investigated categorical variables was analysed. Results: Only three respondents followed a vegan or vegetarian diet during the study. In general, the respondents were unwilling to reduce their meat consumption (55.9%). The willingness to do so was significantly higher amongst women than men (39.4% vs. 15.1%; p = 0.0002), meat avoiders than omnivorous respondents (68.4% vs. 25.0%; p < 0.0001) and health discipline students than non-medical students (47.7% vs. 23.0%; p = 0.0004). Higher awareness of the benefits of plant-based diets was confirmed amongst women, health discipline students and those who avoided meat. Vegan and vegetarian diets were perceived amongst the total number of respondents as more expensive (56.9%) and more difficult to follow compared to omnivore diets (74.7%); in turn, substitutes for animal products were as easily accessible (61.8%). The term 'planetary health diet' was used by only 13.7% of the students surveyed. Conclusions: Promoting the benefits of plant-based diets is important, especially in small, traditional communities, where previously acquired patterns mostly determine dietary choices. The inclusion of issues involving planetary health and sustainable diets into curricula and non-medical fields will enable their promotion amongst young adults in general.

波兰农村一所大学的学生对纯素和素食饮食的知识和态度。
背景:健康的植物性饮食,如纯素和素食饮食,以及地球健康饮食,符合可持续饮食模式的建议,对地球和人类都更健康。这些饮食模式的采用可能取决于社会人口因素和个人动机。目的:本研究旨在分析社会人口因素与大学生对纯素和素食饮食的知识和态度之间的关系。方法:对波兰农村一所大学的241名学生进行匿名调查。分析被调查者的社会人口因素与被调查分类变量之间的关系。结果:在研究期间,只有三名受访者遵循纯素或素食饮食。总体而言,受访者不愿意减少肉类消费(55.9%)。女性的减肥意愿明显高于男性(39.4%比15.1%,p = 0.0002),不吃肉的受访者比杂食的受访者(68.4%比25.0%,p = 0.0004)。女性、健康学科学生和不吃肉的人对植物性饮食的好处有了更高的认识。与杂食饮食(74.7%)相比,在所有受访者中,纯素和素食饮食被认为更昂贵(56.9%),更难遵循;反过来,动物产品的替代品也很容易获得(61.8%)。只有13.7%的受访学生使用“全球健康饮食”一词。结论:促进植物性饮食的益处是很重要的,特别是在小型的传统社区,在那里,以前获得的模式主要决定了饮食选择。将涉及地球健康和可持续饮食的问题纳入课程和非医学领域,将有助于在一般青年成人中推广这些问题。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Nutrition and health
Nutrition and health Medicine-Medicine (miscellaneous)
CiteScore
3.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
160
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