Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
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The Role of Social Support and Self-efficacy for Planning Fruit and Vegetable Intake.

OBJECTIVE: The aim of the current study was to examine the joint effect of self-efficacy, action planning, and received social support on fruit and vegetable intake.

DESIGN: The study used a longitudinal design with 3 waves of data collection.

SETTING: Major university campus in Beijing, China.

PARTICIPANTS: Young adults (n = 286).

VARIABLES MEASURED: Age, gender, body mass index, dietary self-efficacy, and baseline behavior were measured at time 1. Two weeks after time 1, received social support and action planning were assessed (time 2); 4 weeks after time 1, subsequent fruit and vegetable consumption was measured (time 3).

ANALYSIS: In a path analysis, action planning at time 2 was specified as a mediator between self-efficacy at time 1 and fruit and vegetable intake at time 3, controlling for age, gender, body mass index, and baseline behavior. In addition, in a conditional process analysis, received social support at time 2 was specified as a moderator of the self-efficacy-planning relationship.

RESULTS: Action planning mediated between self-efficacy and subsequent dietary behavior, and received social support moderated between self-efficacy and planning supporting a compensation effect. Action planning served as a proximal predictor of fruit and vegetable intake, and planning one's consumption was facilitated by dietary self-efficacy.

CONCLUSIONS AND IMPLICATIONS: Through the identification of social cognitive factors influencing dietary planning, interventions can target self-efficacy and received social support to test the efficacy of these mechanisms in increasing individuals' ability to ensure they consume adequate amounts of fruits and vegetables.

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