Abstract

The present research aims to analyze the habits observed in the perception of the general physical health condition of Portuguese food consumers in the COVID-19 pandemic. The investigation is focused on indicators such as weight, physical activity, and consumption habits through the adoption of healthy and not healthy food. Centered on a quantitative approach, the research is based on the application of a questionnaire to a sample of 741 Portuguese consumers, between November 2020 and February 2021, a period during which the most severe measures of social isolation were imposed by the Portuguese government, since the beginning of the pandemic. Moreover, the questionnaire was applied to consumers over 18 years old. According to this population, and considering a 95% confidence level and a margin of error of 4%, the sample has a minimum of 601 responses. Being so, the results of this research are representative for the Portuguese food consumers. The theoretical model was estimated using Partial Least Squares (PLS) in the Smart PLS 3.0 software. The obtained results allowed us to conclude that the Portuguese perception of their weight did not change in the pandemic, despite showing that in general, the pandemic had a negative impact on their physical condition. On the other hand, the results show that the Portuguese associate the practice of physical exercise with physical well-being. Respondents also confirm a positive relationship between “positive eating behaviors (such as consumption of fruits and vegetables, low saturated foods and rich in monounsaturated and polyunsaturated fats” and water consumption) and “the perception of physical health in general”. On the contrary, respondents’ perception of the choice of negative eating behaviors (measured by the consumption of products with a high content of salt and sugar, snacks, and processed frozen and pre-cooked foods) have a negative impact on the “assessment of physical health, in the COVID-19 pandemic”. Hence, it was concluded that the Portuguese consider that an eventual increase in weight does not necessarily correspond to a perception of worse physical health; the practice of physical exercise and good eating habits corresponds to a perception of better physical health; the adoption of bad eating habits corresponds to the perception of bad physical health.

Highlights

  • We started the present research with a first assumption that fits Hypothesis 1 (H1), that the weight above the ideal has a negative impact on the assessment of the general physical health of the respondents in the COVID-19 pandemic

  • These data indicate that, the respondents consider that the strategies pointed out in several studies (Abbas and Kamel 2020; Arora and Grey 2020; Muscogiuri et al 2020), as ways of overcoming contexts of stress, anxiety, or other problems associated with isolation, such as snacking behaviors, comfort eating and drinking, have brought with it a consequent increase in weight, this reality does not influence the perception of worse general physical health

  • The second hypothesis under study focuses on the influence of daily physical exercise for a positive impact on the assessment of physical health in general, in the COVID-19 pandemic, this hypothesis is confirmed in the present research

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Summary

Introduction

On 11 March 2020, the World Health Organization (WHO) declared COVID-19 as a global pandemic, with proportions never seen before (Kickbusch et al 2020; Phillipou et al 2020). After the appearance of COVID-19 pandemic, multiple countries around the world implemented distinct measures to mitigate, restrict, prevent, interrupt, or retard its spread. Such measures included recommendations to the population on individual disinfection, the use of mask, and physical and social distancing. The outcome of these procedures, resulted in a decrease in social interactions, decreasing employment, which affected the world economy (Phillipou et al 2020). Confinements/lockdowns never seen before were introduced, these types of impositions, forced individuals to “stay at home”

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