AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examines food literacy and dietary adherence in relation to sociodemographic and health factors in North-Western Romania, based on data from 1572 individuals collected in 2019.
  • Most participants did not follow dietary guidelines for fruits, vegetables, fish, and water, despite a majority feeling capable of understanding nutrition's role in health.
  • Disadvantaged groups showed higher non-adherence and lower food literacy, indicating that socioeconomic status negatively impacts these areas and highlighting the need for targeted public health interventions.

Article Abstract

This study investigates food literacy-related abilities and adherence to dietary recommendations in relation to sociodemographic characteristics and health-related features (health literacy, self-rated health and morbidity) in the North-Western region of Romania. This is a secondary analysis of cross-sectional data collected in 2019 from a representative and randomised sample of 1572 individuals. A questionnaire was employed to record participants' sociodemographic characteristics, food-related and health-related features. Most participants were non-adherent to dietary recommendations for fruit and vegetables (83.5%), fish and seafood (61.3%), and water intake (67.9%). However, most participants reported an adequate ability to understand the connection between nutrition and health (89.1%), to distinguish between healthy and less healthy options (84.4%), and to acquire nutrition information (75.6%). Non-adherence to dietary recommendations and low food literacy abilities were more prevalent in disadvantaged groups (older age, rural settings, retirement or social welfare, low educational attainment, formerly married). Health literacy was negatively associated with not adhering to dietary recommendations and poor self-rated food literacy abilities. The study suggests that low socioeconomic status negatively impacts food literacy and adherence to dietary recommendations among Romanian adults. Identifying target populations to improve food-related abilities and health literacy can aid public health services in improving health outcomes.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10343671PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nu15132853DOI Listing

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