Table 4.
Survey Question | University in CA | University in MI | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
n | FRa | 95% CI | P-value | n | FRa | 95% CI | P-value | |
“I try to make food and beverage choices that are good for the environment”b | 721 | 0.90 | (0.84, 0.96) | 0.001 | 566 | 0.75 | (0.69, 0.81) | <0.001 |
“I try to make food and beverage choices that reduce my impact on climate change”b | 721 | 0.90 | (0.84, 0.96) | 0.001 | 566 | 0.78 | (0.72, 0.85) | <0.001 |
“I try to make food and beverage choices that are good for my health”c | 721 | 0.93 | (0.87, 1.00) | 0.06 | 566 | 0.97 | (0.88, 2.13) | 0.6 |
Eating less meat is an effective way to combat climate changed | 669 | 0.87 | (0.79, 0.95) | 0.003 | 544 | 0.80 | (0.72, 0.89) | <0.001 |
FR: Frequency ratio. 100(1-FR) = % lower frequency of red meat consumption for each point on scale
Question as worded in survey with a response scale of 1–7, 1=strongly disagree to 7=strongly agree. Model adjusted for age, gender, race and ethnicity, food security, parental income, Pell grant status, and health attitudes
Question as worded in survey with a response scale of 1–7, 1=strongly disagree to 7=strongly agree. Model adjusted for age, gender, race and ethnicity, food security, parental income, Pell grant status, and environmental attitudes
Statement paraphrased from survey. Students were asked to “indicate whether [eat less meat] is an effective way of combatting climate change” with a response scale of 1–4, 1= not effective at all to 4=highly effective. Adjusted for age, gender, race and ethnicity, food security, parental income, Pell grant status, and health attitudes