4.7 Article

Cultural Influences on the Regulation of Energy Intake and Obesity: A Qualitative Study Comparing Food Customs and Attitudes to Eating in Adults from France and the United States

Journal

NUTRIENTS
Volume 13, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/nu13010063

Keywords

food culture; obesity; weight management; eating behavior

Funding

  1. Institute of Cardiometabolism and Nutrition (ICAN)
  2. Danone Research
  3. Leducq foundation
  4. JPI (Microdiet study)
  5. European commission FP7 grant Metacardis
  6. USDA [8050-51000-105-01S]

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This comparative qualitative study between France and the United States identified both common and divergent attitudes towards food culture and eating behaviors, highlighting the influence of factors such as social interactions, environmental concerns, and perceptions of natural versus processed foods. Further research is needed to develop effective interventions to address obesity in different populations.
(1) Background: The influence of food culture on eating behavior and obesity risk is poorly understood. (2) Methods: In this qualitative study, 25 adults in France with or without overweight/obesity participated in semi-structured interviews (n = 10) or focus groups (n = 15) to examine attitudes to food consumption and external pressures that influence eating behavior and weight management. Results were compared to an equivalent study conducted in the United States, thereby contrasting two countries with markedly different rates of obesity. Emerging key themes in the French data were identified through coding using a reflexive approach. (3) Results: The main themes identified were: (1) influence of commensality, social interactions, and pleasure from eating on eating behavior, (2) having a balanced and holistic approach to nutrition, (3) the role of environmental concerns in food consumption, (4) relationship with natural products (idealized) and food processing (demonized), (5) perceptions of weight status and management. Stress and difficulties in hunger cue discernment were viewed as important obstacles to weight management in both countries. External pressures were described as a major factor that explicitly influences food consumption in the U.S., while there was an implicit influence of external pressures through eating-related social interactions in France. In France, products considered natural where idealized and juxtaposed against processed and industrial products, whereas this was not a salient aspect in the U.S. (4) Conclusions: This first comparative qualitative study assessing aspects of food culture and eating behaviors across countries identifies both common and divergent attitudes to food and eating behavior. Further studies are needed to inform the development of effective behavioral interventions to address obesity in different populations.

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