Dietary Knowledge and Attitude
Cross-source consensus on Dietary Knowledge and Attitude from 1 sources and 4 claims.
1 sources · 4 claims
How it works
Benefits
Comparisons
Highlighted claims
- Dietary knowledge was the strongest individual-level predictor of optimal dietary practice, based on 11 contributing studies, with women with good nutritional knowledge four times more likely to practise optimal dietary behaviours. — Prevalence and associated factors of optimal dietary practices during pregnancy in Ethiopia: a systematic review and meta-analysis
- Good nutritional knowledge enables women to understand the nutritional requirements of pregnancy and make informed food choices. — Prevalence and associated factors of optimal dietary practices during pregnancy in Ethiopia: a systematic review and meta-analysis
- A favourable attitude toward dietary practices was associated with a nearly fourfold increase in optimal dietary behaviour (OR=3.90, based on three studies). — Prevalence and associated factors of optimal dietary practices during pregnancy in Ethiopia: a systematic review and meta-analysis
- One Nigerian study found that a positive attitude was negatively related to dietary practice, contrasting with Ethiopian findings and underscoring the need for context-specific behaviour-change communication. — Prevalence and associated factors of optimal dietary practices during pregnancy in Ethiopia: a systematic review and meta-analysis