Assessment of Healthy Eating Awareness of Schoolchildren in a Digital Environment
https://doi.org/10.35627/2219-5238/2021-29-10-41-46
Abstract
Introduction: Daily diets of contemporary schoolchildren mainly consist of foodstuffs, which are rich in fats and carbohydrates but poor in proteins, vitamins, and trace elements. Food stereotypes associated with consumption of freeze-dried and refined food as well as fast food products have become widespread. Such negative manifestations of the eating behavior of schoolchildren are largely determined by nutritional unawareness and necessitate appropriate measures for enhancing food literacy to preserve and strengthen health of the younger generation.
Objectives: To assess nutritional awareness of contemporary schoolchildren in a digital environment using a modified questionnaire.
Materials and methods: We modified the questionnaire developed on the basis of ten principles of healthy eating promoted by the World Health Organization to establish healthy diet awareness of 73 Moscow fifth-year schoolchildren. The self-administered questionnaire contained 23 questions.
Results: Almost all the respondents lacked the necessary level of knowledge about healthy eating: 93 % and 7 % of the schoolchildren had a moderate and low food literacy level, respectively, and none of the pupils demonstrated a high level of awareness. The diet was perceived as unbalanced or partially balanced by 14 % and 7 %, respectively, and high-calorie – by 70 % of the respondents. Only 10 % of the pupils agreed that the diet influenced their school performance, while 20 % of them were not sure about that and 70 % disagreed.
Conclusions: The identified eating disorders were associated with the level of food literacy. Our questionnaire proved to be an effective tool of obtaining detailed information about dietary habits of schoolchildren, and it can therefore be recommended for a larger survey aimed at early detection of eating disorders, improvement of food literacy, and prevention of nutrition-related health problems.
About the Authors
Yu. V. SolovyevaRussian Federation
Yulia V. Solovyeva, Cand. Sci. (Med.); Senior Researcher, Laboratory of Complex Problems of Hygiene of Children and Adolescents
Bldg 1, 2 Lomonosovsky Avenue, Moscow, 119991
J. Yu. Gorelova
Russian Federation
Janetta Yu. Gorelova, Dr. Sci. (Med.), Professor; Chief Researcher, Laboratory of Complex Problems of Hygiene of Children and Adolescents
Bldg 1, 2 Lomonosovsky Avenue, Moscow, 119991
T. A. Letuchaya
Russian Federation
Tatyana A. Letuchaya, Researcher, Laboratory of Complex Problems of Hygiene of Children and Adolescents
Bldg 1, 2 Lomonosovsky Avenue, Moscow, 119991
N. B. Mirskaya
Russian Federation
Natalia B. Mirskaya, Dr. Sci. (Med.); Chief Researcher, Laboratory of Complex Problems of Hygiene of Children and Adolescents
Bldg 1, 2 Lomonosovsky Avenue, Moscow, 119991
A. R. Zaretskaya
Russian Federation
Anna R. Zaretskaya, Deputy Director for Educational Content, Moscow Department of Education and Science, Western Administrative District
10 Bryanskaya Street, Moscow, 121059
References
1. Mamchik NP, Gabbasova NV, Dzen NV. Eating disorders as a predictor of excess body weight in healthy people. Nauchno-Meditsinskiy Vestnik Tsentralnogo Chernozem’ya. 2018;(73):79–86. (In Russ.)
2. Leskova IV, Ershova EV, Nikitina EA, Krasnikovsky VYa, Ershova YuA, Adamskaya LV. Obesity in Russia: Modern view in the light of a social problems. Ozhirenie i Metabolizm. 2019;16(1):20–26. (In Russ.) doi: 10.14341/omet9988
3. Izotova EA, Pak AV. [The value of eating culture and hygienic oral care in the development of caries in secondary school pupils.] Byulleten' Meditsinskikh Internet-Konferentsiy. 2013;3(9):1092–1093. (In Russ.)
4. Tapeshkina NV. [Characteristics of the health status of children and adolescents related to nutrition.] In: Gerasimenko NF, Glybochko PV, Esaulenko IE, Popov VI, Starodubov VI, Tuteliyan VA, eds. [Adolescent Health.] Moscow: Nauchnaya Kniga Publ.; 2019;2:184-204. (In Russ.)
5. Aminova OS, Titenkova NN, Uvarova YuE. [Nutrition of young people as a factor of self-preservation behavior.] In: Gerasimenko NF, Glybochko PV, Esaulenko IE, Popov VI, Starodubov VI, Tuteliyan VA, eds. [Adolescent Health.] Moscow: Nauchnaya Kniga Publ.; 2019;2:205–216. (In Russ.)
6. Gabbasova NV, Dzen NV. [Obesity and eating disorder among youth: State of the art.] In: Gerasimenko NF, Glybochko PV, Esaulenko IE, Popov VI, Starodubov VI, Tuteliyan VA, eds. [Adolescent Health.] Moscow: Nauchnaya Kniga Publ.; 2019;2:246–260. (In Russ.)
7. Mirskaya NB. [Eating behavior of contemporary students as a risk factor for disorders and diseases of their organ of vision.] In: Gerasimenko NF, Glybochko PV, Esaulenko IE, Popov VI, Starodubov VI, Tuteliyan VA, eds. [Adolescent Health.] Moscow: Nauchnaya Kniga Publ.; 2019;2:312–322. (In Russ.)
8. Sokolova NV, Goncharova IG, Gubina OI. [Analysis of the results of monitoring actual nutrition of high school adolescents.] In: Gerasimenko NF, Glybochko PV, Esaulenko IE, Popov VI, Starodubov VI, Tuteliyan VA, eds. [Adolescent Health.] Moscow: Nauchnaya Kniga Publ.; 2019;2:323–338. (In Russ.)
9. Salam RA, Das JK, Ahmed W, et al. Effects of preventive nutrition interventions among adolescents on health and nutritional status in low- and middle-income countries: A systematic review and meta-analysis. Nutrients. 2019;12(1):49. doi: 10.3390/nu12010049
10. Corvalán C, Garmendia ML, Jones-Smith, et al. Nutrition status of children in Latin America. Obes Rev. 2017;18(Suppl 2):7–18. doi: 10.1111/obr.12571
11. Smith JD, Berkel C, Jordan N, et al. An individually tailored family-centered intervention for pediatric obesity in primary care: study protocol of a randomized type II hybrid effectiveness–implementation trial (Raising Healthy Children study). Implement Sci. 2018;13(1):11. doi: 10.1186/s13012-017-0697-2
12. Kordenko AN, Kovylova VI, Popov VI, Tarasenko PA. Critical factors of the life quality of adolescents. Gigiena i Sanitariya. 2015;94(9):20–21. (In Russ.)
13. To QG, Do DV, To KG, Gallegos D. After-school tutoring, electronic device availability, and obesity among fifth-grade students in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam. Asia Pac J Public Health. 2021;33(1):93–99. doi: 10.1177/1010539520968465
14. Tutelyan VA, Spirichev VB, Shatnyuk LN. [Correction of micronutrient deficiency as the most important aspect of the concept of healthy nutrition for the population of Russia.] Voprosy Pitaniya. 1999;68(1):3–11. (In Russ.)
15. Gorelova ZhYu, Filippova SP, Solovyova YuV, et al. Role of the family and school in forming eating behavior in the pupils of Moscow and the Altai Territory. Profilakticheskaya Meditsina. 2018;21(6):63–67. (In Russ.) doi: 10.17116/profmed20182106163
16. Skvortsova VA, Borovik TE, Semenova NN, et al. Sugar and salt in a young child’s diet: effect on health. Voprosy Sovremennoy Pediatrii. 2016;15(6):596–603. (In Russ.) doi: 10.15690/vsp.v15i6.1657
17. Zhao Y, Wang L, Xue H, Wang H, Wang Y. Fast food consumption and its associations with obesity and hypertension among children: results from the baseline data of the Childhood Obesity Study in China Mega-cities. BMC Public Health. 2017;17(1):933. doi: 10.1186/s12889-017-4952-x
18. Sokhan' IV. [Fast food as the current gastronomic culture of consumption.] Zhurnal Sotsiologii i Sotsialnoy Antropologii. 2014;14(5):260–269. (In Russ.) Accessed October 20, 2021. https://cyberleninka.ru/article/n/fast-fud-kak-aktualnaya-gastronomicheskaya-praktika-potrebleniya/viewer.
19. Kuchma VR, Makarova AYu, Yamshchikova NL, et al. Formation of knowledge of students in the field of healthy nutrition. Rossiyskiy Pediatricheskiy Zhurnal. 2018;21(4):221–224. (In Russ.) doi: 10.18821/1560-9561-2018-21(4)-221-224
20. Gorelova ZhYu, Ivanenko AV, Petrenko AO, Solovieva YuV, Letuchaya TA, Uglov SYu. Modern approaches to the development of school food rations. Voprosy Shkol'noy i Universitetskoy Meditsiny i Zdorov'ya. 2019;(1):40–48. (In Russ.)
21. Kuchma VR, Gorelova ZhYu, Ivanenko AV, Petrenko AO, Solovieva YuV, Letuchaya TA. Using the capabilities of the information server “Your Choice” in nutrition as a tool for forming the right choice in school meals. Gigiena i Sanitariya. 2020;99(12):1407–1411. (In Russ.) doi: 10.47470/0016-9900-2020-99-12-1407-1411
22. Makarova SG, Timofeeva AG, Gorelova ZhYu, Yasakov DS. [Basics of a Healthy Diet. Basics of a Healthy Lifestyle for Children.] Fisenko AP, ed. 2nd ed. Information Materials of the National Medical Research Center for Children’s Health. Moscow: Poligrafist i Izdatel' Publ.; 2021:44–58. (In Russ.)
23. Taylor BJ, Gray AR, Galland BC, et al. Targeting sleep, food, and activity in infants for obesity prevention: An RCT. Pediatrics. 2017;139(3):e20162037. doi: 10.1542/peds.2016-2037
24. Hodder RK, Stacey FG, Wyse RJ, et al. Interventions for increasing fruit and vegetable consumption in children aged five years and under. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2017;9(9):CD008552. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD008552.pub3
25. Bailey CJ, Drummond MJ, Ward PR. Food literacy programmes in secondary schools: a systematic literature review and narrative synthesis of quantitative and qualitative evidence. Public Health Nutr. 2019;22(15):2891–2913. doi: 10.1017/S1368980019001666
26. Brooks N, Begley A. Adolescent food literacy programmes: A review of the literature. Nutr Diet. 2014;71(3):158–171. doi: 10.1111/1747-0080.12096
27. Renko S. The role of education in promoting healthy eating: Croatian parents’ and teachers’ perspectives. In: Proceedings of the 11th annual International Conference of Education, Research and Innovation, November 12–14, 2018. IATED; 2018:3688–3694. doi: 10.21125/iceri.2018.1819
Review
For citations:
Solovyeva Yu.V., Gorelova J.Yu., Letuchaya T.A., Mirskaya N.B., Zaretskaya A.R. Assessment of Healthy Eating Awareness of Schoolchildren in a Digital Environment. Public Health and Life Environment – PH&LE. 2021;(10):41-46. (In Russ.) https://doi.org/10.35627/2219-5238/2021-29-10-41-46