Publication | Closed Access
Preferred Sources of Nutrition Information: Contrasts Between Younger and Older Adults
30
Citations
20
References
2011
Year
NutritionYoung AdultsDigital MarketingNutrition LiteracyGeriatric NutritionPublic Health NutritionEducationCommunicationLiteracy EvaluationSocial MediaHealth CommunicationDigital HealthPersonalized NutritionPopulation NutritionAdult LiteracyPublic HealthHealth EducationConsumer HealthInformation LiteracyWeb LiteracyDiet QualityGeriatricsInformation BehaviorHealth LiteracyLiteracy MediaNutrition InformationElectronic LiteracySocial AccessPreferred SourcesHuman NutritionOlder Adults
Preferences for sources of nutrition information are determined by age, social relationships, resource familiarity, and electronic literacy. Young adults (ages 18–25) and older adults (ages 60–103) were surveyed. Young adults took Research Readiness Self-Assessments that measure electronic information literacy. Dietitians were preferred by 34% of younger adults and 15% of older adults. Internet was favored by 22% of young adults, but many had trouble evaluating the quality of nutrition Web sites. Older adults in poor health sought out dietitians, while the remainder preferred other health professionals. The youngest adults and many healthy older adults preferred family and friends.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1