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Food Choice Motives When Purchasing in Organic and Conventional Consumer Clusters: Focus on Sustainable Concerns (The NutriNet-Sante Cohort Study)

Baudry, Julia; Peneau, Sandrine; Allès, Benjamin; Touvier, Mathilde; Hercberg, Serge; Galan, Pilar; Amiot-Carlin, Marie Josephe; Lairon, Denis; Méjean, Caroline and Kesse-Guyot, Emmanuelle (2017) Food Choice Motives When Purchasing in Organic and Conventional Consumer Clusters: Focus on Sustainable Concerns (The NutriNet-Sante Cohort Study). Nutrients.

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Document available online at: https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-01595546


Summary

The purpose of this study was to examine food choice motives associated with various organic and conventional dietary patterns among 22,366 participants of the NutriNet-Sante study. Dietary intakes were estimated using a food frequency questionnaire. Food choice motives were assessed using a validated 63-item-questionnaire gathered into nine food choice motive dimension scores: "absence of contaminants", "avoidance for environmental reasons", "ethics and environment", "taste", "innovation", "local and traditional production", "price", "health" and "convenience". Five consumers' clusters were identified: "standard conventional food small eaters", "unhealthy conventional food big eaters", "standard organic food small eaters", " green organic food eaters" and "hedonist moderate organic food eaters". Relationships between food choice motive dimension scores and consumers' clusters were assessed using analysis of covariance (ANCOVA) models adjusted for sociodemographic factors. "Green organic food eaters" had the highest mean score for the "health" dimension, while "unhealthy conventional food big eaters" obtained the lowest mean score for the "absence of contaminants" dimension. "Standard organic food small eaters", "green organic food eaters" and "hedonist moderate organic food eaters" had comparable scores for the "taste" dimension. "Unhealthy conventional food big eaters" had the highest mean score for the "price" dimension while "green organic food eaters" had the lowest mean scores for the "innovation" and "convenience" dimensions. These results provide new insights into the food choice motives of diverse consumers' profiles including "green" and "hedonist" eaters.


EPrint Type:Journal paper
Keywords:health food (en), food habits (en), clusters of consumers (en), food choice motives (en), organic food consumption (en), sustainability (en), choix alimentaire (fr), prix alimentaire (fr), aliment santé (fr), éthique environnementale (fr), alimentation biologique (fr), comportement alimentaire (fr), étude consommateurs (fr), fonction de covariance (fr)
Subjects:"Organics" in general
Research affiliation: France > INRAe - Institut national de recherche pour l’agriculture, l’alimentation et l’environnement
ISSN:ISSN: 2072-6643
DOI:10.3390/nu9020088
Related Links:https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-01595546/document
Project ID:HAL-INRAe
Deposited By: PENVERN, Servane
ID Code:41454
Deposited On:12 Aug 2021 10:37
Last Modified:12 Aug 2021 10:37
Document Language:English

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