Abstract

This study aimed to document the prevalence and socio-demographic correlates of time spent cooking by adults in the 2005 UK Time-Use Survey. Respondents reported their main activities, in 10 minute slots, throughout one 24 hour period. Activities were coded into 30 pre-defined codes, including ‘cooking, washing up’. Four measures of time spent cooking were calculated: any time spent cooking, 30 continuous minutes spent cooking, total time spent cooking, and longest continuous time spent cooking. Socio-demographic correlates were: age, employment, social class, education, and number of adults and children in the household. Analyses were stratified by gender. Data from 4214 participants were included. 85% of women and 60% of men spent any time cooking; 60% of women and 33% of men spent 30 continuous minutes cooking. Amongst women, older age, not being in employment, lower social class, greater education, and living with other adults or children were positively associated with time cooking. Few differences in time spent cooking were seen in men. Socio-economic differences in time spent cooking may have been overstated as a determinant of socio-economic differences in diet, overweight and obesity. Gender was a stronger determinant of time spent cooking than other socio-demographic variables.

Highlights

  • Overweight and obesity are endemic in many countries (Ng et al, 2014), with socio-economic inequalities disadvantaging the least affluent often seen– in developed countries and women (Friel & Broom, 2007)

  • Our aim was to describe the prevalence and socio-demographic correlates of a number of markers of time spent cooking in the UK 2005 Time-Use Survey – the most recent time-use data available from the UK

  • The results found in relation to socio-demographic correlates of the other measures of time spent cooking broadly reflected those found in relation to spending at least 30 continuous minutes cooking

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Summary

Introduction

Overweight and obesity are endemic in many countries (Ng et al, 2014), with socio-economic inequalities disadvantaging the least affluent often seen– in developed countries and women (Friel & Broom, 2007). Unhealthy dietary patterns are part of the complex causal web of overweight and obesity (Butland et al, 2007). Decreasing home-cooking skills and increasing socio-economic differences in such skills have been proposed as an explanation for increasingly unhealthy diets, rising overweight and obesity, and socio-economic inequalities in these (Lichtenstein & Ludwig, 2010)

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