Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10071/28619
Author(s): Roque, L.
Campos, L.
Guedes, D.
Godinho, C.
Truninger, M.
Graça, J.
Date: 2023
Title: Insights into parents' and teachers' support for policies promoting increased plant-based eating in schools
Journal title: Appetite
Volume: 184
Reference: Roque, L., Campos, L., Guedes, D., Godinho, C., Truninger, M., & Graça, J. (2023). Insights into parents' and teachers' support for policies promoting increased plant-based eating in schools. Appetite, 184, 106511. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.appet.2023.106511
ISSN: 0195-6663
DOI (Digital Object Identifier): 10.1016/j.appet.2023.106511
Keywords: Meat consumption
Plant-based diets
Flexitarianism
School meals
Policy support
Abstract: Global environmental and public health challenges related to current food systems call for large-scale shifts towards increasingly plant-based diets, especially in Western meat-centric societies. School meal systems can play a role in these changes due to their widespread prevalence and multi-sectoral impact. However, there is a lack of evidence about how adults involved in the school meals system perceive school-based pro-environmental food policies, which limits the ability to align those policies with the needs and expectations of the school community. This study aimed to address this knowledge gap by exploring parents' (n = 104) and teachers' (n = 252) support for policies to promote increased plant-based eating in public schools in a highly meat-centric EU country (Portugal). Overall, teachers seemed to be slightly more supportive of such policies and displayed more favorable (injunctive and dynamic) norms toward plant-based eating, more negative appraisals of meals with meat (i.e., perceived healthiness, naturalness, and sustainability), and lower attachment to meat consumption. Furthermore, injunctive norms in favor of plant-based meals were linked with higher support for measures promoting plant-based meals in schools, in both samples (parents, teachers). Lower meat attachment and favorable perceived meal attributes (e.g., perceptions about plant-based and fish meals) were associated with teachers' support for measures promoting plant-based meals in schools. These findings suggest that future efforts and research with parents and teachers to enable less meat-centric and more flexitarian food practices in schools should consider social and motivation variables relevant to plant-forward transitions.
Peerreviewed: yes
Access type: Open Access
Appears in Collections:CIS-RI - Artigos em revistas científicas internacionais com arbitragem científica

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