Nutrition education and its relationship to body image and food intake in Asian young and adolescents: a systematic review

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Abstract

Background: The literature brings to light the unhealthy nutritional habits prevalent among Asian adolescents and their high level of body image dissatisfaction. This study aims to conduct a systematic review of the literature on the effect of nutritional education interventions on their nutritional knowledge and food intake behavior, attitude, practice, and body image. Methods: We searched relevant published studies in PubMed, Web of Science, Scopus, Science Direct, and Springer using the PICO framework and performed a quality assessment using the 10-point checklist adapted from the National Institutes for Health tool. Results: The majority of the nutritional education interventions improve unhealthy food intake and body image misperception, particularly on nutritional knowledge/self-efficacy, healthy dietary habits, physical activities, and fruit and vegetable intake. We also found a negative association with excess weight gain, obesity, and unethical weight reduction practices, leading to dissatisfaction with body image. Conclusion: These interventions can help address dietary problems and body image perception and support the development of future interventions.

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Pushpa, B. S., Abdul Latif, S. N., Sharbini, S., Murang, Z. R., & Ahmad, S. R. (2024). Nutrition education and its relationship to body image and food intake in Asian young and adolescents: a systematic review. Frontiers in Nutrition. Frontiers Media SA. https://doi.org/10.3389/fnut.2024.1287237

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