Is adolescents' food intake associated with exposure to the food intake of their mothers and best friends?
Date of Archiving
2023Archive
Radboud Data Repository
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Publication type
Dataset
Access level
Restricted access
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Organization
SW OZ BSI OGG
SW OZ BSI ON
Audience(s)
Behavioural and educational sciences
Languages used
English
Key words
Peers; Adolescents; Parents; Snacking; Food intakeAbstract
Included in this collection are the following files:- The final paper: “van den Broek et al. 2020 - Final exposure paper Nutrients.pdf”- Data file: “W1_datafile_sumscores_short.csv”- Analytic code: “R script exposure paper.R”- Materials: The codebook for the measures used in this paper can be found on https://osf.io/bysgq/ Abstract: Both mothers’ and best friends’ food intake are associated with adolescents’ food intake, but they are rarely investigated simultaneously. In this study, we tested the associations of mothers’ and best friends’ food intake with adolescents’ intake of unhealthy and healthy food, obtained from home and from outside the home, and the moderating role of adolescents’ exposure to their food intake. Participants included 667 adolescents (53% female, Mage = 12.9) and 396 of their mothers. Within this adolescent sample, 378 best friend dyads were identified. All participants completed food frequency questionnaires. Mothers separately reported on their food intake in the presence and absence of their child, and adolescents indicated how often they ate and drank together with their best friend during school breaks. Mothers’, but not best friends’, food intake was positively related to adolescents’ intake of unhealthy and healthy food obtained from home and healthy food obtained from outside the home. Exposure to mothers’ healthy food intake magnified mother-child similarities in healthy food intake. Exposure to best friends’ intake of unhealthy food moderated adolescent-friend similarities in unhealthy food intake. Future work should assess the mechanisms that underlie these similarities, and should investigate these associations over time and in later developmental periods.
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- Datasets [1853]
- Faculty of Social Sciences [30014]