To eat or not to eat junk foods? Improvement in children’s intention to reduce junk foods consumption following exposure to a media literacy intervention
Nino Daryll Bicoy | Rotacio Gravoso
Abstract:
Exposure to junk food information leads to high junk food consumption
among children. This situation has raised concerns among agencies and
organizations mandated to ensure children's health because high junk foods
consumption results in several health problems. This study aimed to ascertain
the effects of a media literacy intervention on elementary school children's
knowledge, attitude towards junk foods, subjective norm, perceived behavioral
control, and intention to eat junk foods and consume junk foods. Treatment
groups included analysis+analysis, analysis+production, and no intervention.
Children who underwent the analysis+production approach had significantly
higher improvement in their attitude, subjective norm, perceived behavioral
control, and intention during the post-test and the delayed post-test than those in
the analysis+analysis approach and those not treated with any intervention.
Results suggest that the analysis+production approach could improve children's
knowledge of junk foods' health impacts and reduce their attitude towards
eating junk foods, subjective norm, perceived behavioral control, and intention to
eat junk foods. Overall findings indicate that initiatives aimed to encourage
children to eat nutritious foods need repetition of the message. Aside from
curriculum integration, engaging parents and application of game-based
learning are also potential mechanisms for improving children's food habits.
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