Brief report: Compensatory health beliefs are negatively associated with intentions for regular fruit and vegetable consumption when self-efficacy is low
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Compensatory health beliefs (the beliefs that an unhealthy behaviour can be compensated by a healthy behaviour) can interfere with adherence to fruit and vegetable consumption recommendations. Fruit and vegetable consumption, social cognitive variables and compensatory health beliefs were investigated via self-report at baseline (T0) and 8-week follow-up (T1) in Nā=ā790 participants. Self-efficacy predicted fruit and vegetable consumption intentions. Planning mediated between intentions and T1 fruit and vegetable consumption. Compensatory health beliefs negatively predicted intentions at low self-efficacy levels only. The results propose the use of self-efficacy interventions to diminish the negative effects of compensatory health beliefs when forming fruit and vegetable consumption intentions and foster planning to translate intentions into behaviour.
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STORM, Vera, Dominique Alexandra REINWAND, Julian WIENERT, Tim KUHLMANN, Hein DE VRIES, Sonia LIPPKE, 2017. Brief report: Compensatory health beliefs are negatively associated with intentions for regular fruit and vegetable consumption when self-efficacy is low. In: Journal of Health Psychology. 2017, 22(8), pp. 1094-1100. ISSN 1359-1053. eISSN 1461-7277. Available under: doi: 10.1177/1359105315625358BibTex
@article{Storm2017Brief-39628, year={2017}, doi={10.1177/1359105315625358}, title={Brief report: Compensatory health beliefs are negatively associated with intentions for regular fruit and vegetable consumption when self-efficacy is low}, number={8}, volume={22}, issn={1359-1053}, journal={Journal of Health Psychology}, pages={1094--1100}, author={Storm, Vera and Reinwand, Dominique Alexandra and Wienert, Julian and Kuhlmann, Tim and de Vries, Hein and Lippke, Sonia} }
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