Publication | Open Access
Mother's Nutrition Knowledge and Children's Dietary Intakes
167
Citations
18
References
1999
Year
NutritionNutrition LiteracyPublic Health NutritionDietary IntakesAdolescent NutritionNutrition EducationPopulation NutritionMaternal NutritionPublic HealthHealth EducationHealth PolicyDiet QualityHealth PromotionMaternal EducationMaternal HealthMaternal KnowledgeDietetics EducationPregnancy NutritionPediatricsChildren's Eating BehaviorChild NutritionYoung ChildrenDietary Health
Abstract This article uses U.S. food consumption data to examine the effect of maternal nutrition knowledge on the dietary intakes of children between two and seventeen years of age. Results show that maternal knowledge influences children's diets and that such influence decreases as children grow older. Nutrition knowledge acts as a pathway through which maternal education influences children's diets. This finding supports the hypothesis that education affects health‐related choices by raising the allocative efficiency of health input use. The results suggest that nutrition education may be more effective if targeted both toward mothers with young children and directly toward school‐age children.
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