Abstract

Improving nutrition improves health outcomes. Eating in a catering system may provide an environment for promoting healthy dietary choices. To map the factors that shape the food choices of diners who routinely eat in catering systems, we collected and analyzed qualitative data about diners’ perceptions of their food choices in communal dining rooms in three kibbutzim in Israel. From May to July 2014, we conducted in-depth, semi-structured, face-to-face interviews with 13 diners who ate at least three lunches per week in the kibbutz’s dining room. Data analysis followed thematic analysis principles. Two categories of themes emerged from the interviews. In the personal context category, the themes identified were eating as a task and attempts to control one’s eating. In the contextual aspects of eating in the catering system category, themes identified were eating in the dining room as a default, the characteristics of the food served, routine, and personal versus public aspects. The sub-theme of the diners’ freedom of choice emerged in the two categories of themes. Diners’ wishes of maintaining their freedom of choice may be an important contribution to the debate of whether catering systems should provide only healthy foods, which may jeopardize diners’ freedom of choice.

Highlights

  • The human diet has a significant impact on disease prevention, quality of life, and longevity [1]

  • Understanding the factors involved in the food choices of diners in catering systems may increase their responsiveness to nutritional intervention programs [5]

  • In the contextual aspects of eating in the catering system category, the themes identified were eating in the dining room as a default, the characteristics of the food served, routine, and personal versus public aspects of eating in a catering system

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Summary

Introduction

The human diet has a significant impact on disease prevention, quality of life, and longevity [1]. Understanding the psychosocial influences on food choices is critical to the development of dietary intervention programs to assist consumers in developing healthy eating habits and promoting a dietary shift toward a healthy diet [2]. The factors known as influencing food choices include food-related internal factors (sensory and perceptual features), food-related external (environmental) factors, personal factors (physiological and psychological characteristics, habits and experiences), cognitive factors (knowledge, attitude and personal identity) as well as sociocultural factors [6]. Environmental changes in catering systems have been shown to have a small-to-medium effect on improving diners’ nutritional choices [7]. Understanding the factors involved in the food choices of diners in catering systems may increase their responsiveness to nutritional intervention programs [5]

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