4.4 Article

Nutritional knowledge, attitude, and use of food labels among Indian adults with multiple chronic conditions A moderated mediation model

Journal

BRITISH FOOD JOURNAL
Volume 121, Issue 7, Pages 1480-1494

Publisher

EMERALD GROUP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1108/BFJ-09-2018-0568

Keywords

Trust; Self-efficacy; Gender; Attitude; Nutritional knowledge; Food label use; Multiple chronic conditions

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Purpose The purpose of this paper is to examine the indirect effects of nutritional knowledge and attitude toward food label use on food label use through self-efficacy and trust, as well as whether gender moderates this relationship. Design/methodology/approach A sample of Indian adults with multiple chronic conditions was surveyed about their nutritional knowledge, attitude, self-efficacy and use of food labels. Hypotheses were tested using Hayes's (2013) PROCESS macro for SPSS. Findings The results show that nutritional knowledge and attitude toward food label use positively predict food label use through self-efficacy and trust. However, these mediation effects are moderated by gender such that the indirect relationship is stronger among men than women. Originality/value This study uniquely applies Fisher and Fisher's (1992) information-motivation-behavioral skills model as a theoretical framework to examine the influence of nutrition knowledge and attitude toward food label use on food label usage of Indian patients with multiple chronic diseases.

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