Abstract

During pregnancy, women exposed to microbiological risks are more susceptible to contracting specific pathogens, which can lead to serious diseases both in the mother and the foetus. Food-borne diseases can be avoided to a large extent by following good practices of food manipulation and cooking. Safe eating behaviours are influenced by knowledge and perception of food risks and are constructed, among others, online. Pregnant women often use Web 2.0 to obtain and share pregnancy-related information as a strategy of collective coping with emotions through conversations. This paper explores how knowledge and perceptions of food risks during pregnancy are shared among users on Italian Facebook pages and groups. The corpus, including 648,399 items (i.e., posts), was analysed: (a) first, by means of the Reinert method, to verify to what extent issues concerning food risks are debated; and (b) second, through a manual content analysis, to observe how food risks are addressed in terms of contents and social sharing of emotions. The main results show that food risk is not among the most discussed topics, and the least known and debated food risks are the most widespread (e.g., campylobacteriosis). Sometimes, food risks, when addressed, were minimised or denied, and the belief to be ‘less at risk’ than peers for such risk (i.e., optimistic bias) was observed. The results underline the importance, for health institutions, of building a tailored communication strategy on food risks during pregnancy to promote correct food behaviours by exploiting social networks.

Highlights

  • The overall aim of this study is to explore how and to what extent knowledge and perceptions of food risks during pregnancy are shared on social networks (Facebook in particular)

  • Eight topics were identified from the subcorpus and subdivided by hierarchical descending analysis in two macro groups: one containing three topics related to food risks, the other consisting of five topics related to nutrition in general

  • From the three topics related to food risks, the one pertaining to food risks in childhood was excluded from the analysis

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Summary

Introduction

Pregnant women are one of the groups most at risk of contracting food-borne diseases [1]. Due to changes in the immune system during pregnancy women are more exposed to microbiological risks in general, and more susceptible to contracting specific pathogens such as Toxoplasma gondii, Listeria monocytogenes, and Salmonella, which can cause serious diseases in women and their foetuses [2]. Previous Italian studies [3,4] recommended actively screening for toxoplasmosis during pregnancy, due to the high incidence of this infection. The results of these studies suggest that most of the pregnant women living in the areas with considerable infection rates did not develop antibodies to toxoplasmosis. The incidence can be underestimated due to the non-systematic application of the diagnostic investigation of events associated with pregnancy [5]

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