Associations between attitudes towards and reported intakes of sugars, low/no-calorie sweeteners, and sweet-tasting foods in a UK sample

Claudia S. Tang, Monica Mars, Janet James, Katherine M. Appleton*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

6 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Public health initiatives are currently aiming to lower free sugar intakes for health benefits, but attitudes towards sugars, their alternatives such as low/no-calorie sweeteners (LNCS), and towards sweet-tasting foods may be hampering efforts. This work investigated associations between attitudes towards and the reported intakes of sugars, LNCS and sweet-tasting foods, and identified latent attitude profiles in subpopulations of adults in the United Kingdom. A total of 581 adults completed a questionnaire assessing their usual intake of sugars, LNCS and sweet-tasting foods, attitudes towards these foods and various demographic characteristics. Six principal components explained 39.1% of the variance in the attitude responses, named: ‘Personal Impact’, ‘Personal Management’, ‘Apathy’, ‘Negativity’, ‘Perceived Understanding’ and ‘Perceived Nonautonomy’. Personal Impact was negatively associated with reported consumption of sugar-food and sweet-tasting food groups more frequently (smallest β = −0.24, p <.01). Personal Management was positively associated with reporting adding sugar and consuming sugar-food and sweet-tasting food groups more frequently (smallest β = 0.14, p <.01). Three latent classes of participants with distinct patterns of attitudes were identified, labelled: ‘Feeling Ill-equipped’ (n = 52), ‘Actively Engaged’ (n = 162) or ‘Unopinionated’ (n = 367). Individuals who were classed as Actively Engaged reported adding LNCS more frequently than those classed as Feeling Ill-equipped (t(212) = -2.14, p<.01), who reported consuming sweet-tasting food groups more frequently than those classed as Unopinionated (t(417) = 2.65, p <.01). These findings suggest the need for personalised approaches within public health initiatives, to reduce free sugar intakes.

Original languageEnglish
Article number107169
JournalAppetite
Volume194
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Mar 2024

Keywords

  • Attitudes
  • Dietary intake
  • Latent profile analysis
  • Low/no-calorie sweetener
  • Sugar
  • Sweet taste

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