Article

Difficulty of healthy eating: a Rasch model approach.

University of Guelph, Guelph, Ontario, Canada.
Social Science [?] Medicine (impact factor: 2.7). 02/2010; 70(10):1574-80. DOI:10.1016/j.socscimed.2010.01.037
Source: PubMed

ABSTRACT This study aims to measure the difficulty of healthy eating as a single latent construct and, within that, assess which dietary guidelines consumers find more or less difficult to comply with using the Rasch model approach. Participants self-reported their compliance with 12 health-promoting dietary recommendations related to cooking methods and consumption of specific food items. Data were drawn from a survey elicited using a longitudinal consumer panel established in the City of Guelph, Ontario, Canada in 2008. The panel consists of 1962 randomly-selected residents of Guelph between the age of 20 and 69 years. The response rate was equal to 68 percent. The main assumptions of the Rasch model were satisfied. However, subsequent differential item functioning analysis revealed significant scale variations by gender, education, age and household income, which reduced the validity of the Rasch scale. Conversely, these scale variations highlight the importance of socio-economic and demographic factors on the difficulty of healthy eating.

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Keywords

12 health-promoting dietary recommendations
 
1962 randomly-selected residents
 
68 percent
 
cooking methods
 
dietary guidelines consumers
 
difficult
 
household income
 
longitudinal consumer panel
 
main assumptions
 
Ontario
 
Rasch model
 
Rasch model approach
 
Rasch scale
 
response rate
 
scale variations
 
significant scale variations
 
single latent
 
specific food items
 
subsequent differential item
 
survey elicited
 

Spencer Henson