• Title of article

    To eat or not to eat red meat. A closer look at the relationship between restrained eating and vegetarianism in college females

  • Author/Authors

    Catherine A. Forestell، نويسنده , , Andrea M. Spaeth، نويسنده , , Stephanie A. Kane، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2012
  • Pages
    7
  • From page
    319
  • To page
    325
  • Abstract
    Previous research has suggested that vegetarianism may serve as a mask for restrained eating. The purpose of this study was to compare the dietary habits and lifestyle behaviors of vegetarians (n = 55), pesco-vegetarians (n = 28), semi-vegetarians (n = 29), and flexitarians (n = 37), to omnivores (n = 91), who do not restrict animal products from their diets. A convenience sample of college-age females completed questionnaires about their eating habits, food choice motivations, and personality characteristics. Results indicated that while vegetarians and pesco-vegetarians were more open to new experiences and less food neophobic, they were not more restrained than omnivores. Rather semi-vegetarians; those who restricted only red meat from their diet, and flexitarians; those who occasionally eat red meat, were significantly more restrained than omnivores. Whereas food choices of semi-vegetarians and flexitarians were motivated by weight control, vegetarians and pesco-vegetarians’ food choices were motivated by ethical concerns. By focusing specifically on semi-vegetarian and flexitarian subgroups, more effective approaches can be developed to ensure that their concerns about weight loss do not lead to unhealthful or disordered eating patterns.
  • Keywords
    Vegetarians , Dieting , Flexitarian , Semi-vegetarians , Food choice motivations
  • Journal title
    Appetite
  • Serial Year
    2012
  • Journal title
    Appetite
  • Record number

    956600