Table A3.
Outcome Measure: Reason to Reduce Meat or Become Vegetarian | |||||||
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Author(s), Year | Design; Year Data Collected | Country; Sample | Main Research Question | Provided Information Prior the Experiment | Question or Dependent Variable | Response or Finding | Effect of Covariates |
De Backer, Charlotte J.S. Hudders, Liselot; 2014 [49] |
Large-scale Online survey; year not specified. | Belgium; N = 1566 (76% women) M age = 26.12 SD = 8.92 10.6% = vegetarians; 41.8% semi-vegetarians; 47.6% light-semi-vegetarians. |
Motives underlying the different forms of vegetarianism and semi-vegetarianism in a culture where meat continues to play a crucial role in people’s diets. |
No prior info provided. | Agree or disagree with a 7-point Likert scale with motives for meat reduction/avoidance. Ecological motives: “I don’t eat meat every day because it is better for the environment,” and “I don’t eat meat every day because eating meat increases my ecological footprint”. |
143/165 vegetarians strongly agreed with ecological motives (6.1 or higher in a Likert scale 1–7). For 28/143 ecological concerns were the main drive (mean of 6.5/7 Liker scale) The rest of the vegetarians (n = 22) disagreed with the ecological concerns (mean of 2.61/7 Likert scale). 323/650 semi-vegetarians: reported ecological concerns as the main motivator for strongly reducing meat. (Mean of 5.57/7 Likert scale) 254/741 light semi-vegetarians reported ecological concerns as the main motivator for avoiding meat one or two days a week. (Mean of 5.12/7 Likert scale) |
Ecological concern positively associated with meat reduction, except for light semi-vegetarians. |
De Boer et al., 2017 [52] | Face-to-face interviews; 2013 | Netherlands; two samples of adults (aged 18–35) Native Dutch, n = 357, (Men 48%) Second generation Chinese Dutch, n = 350 (Men 47%) Participants were categorized in four dietary groups (all self-declared) (1) Vegetarians (2) Low meat eaters (2–3 days a week) (3) Medium meat eaters (4–5 days a week) (4) High meat eaters (6 days or more) |
Differences between vegetarians and three categories of meat eaters in relation to (1) key characteristics of their hot meal, (2) strength and profile of their food-related motivation, and (3) reasons for and reasons against frequently eating meat? | No prior info provided. | Indicate three reasons for not frequently eating meat. Among them, participants could choose “Because it’s better for the environment”. | NATIVE DUTCH; Self-declared vegetarians: 21% indicated the environment as a reason for not frequently eating meat. Low meat-eaters: 30% Medium meat-eaters: 44% High meat-eaters: 41% TOTAL: 38% CHINESE DUTCH: Self-declared vegetarians: 42% Low meat-eaters: 38% Medium meat-eaters: 32% High meat-eaters: 15% TOTAL: 26% Environmental and financial reasons were mentioned relatively often, but according to the authors, the fact that they were also mentioned by high meat-eaters indicates that, under the current circumstances, these reasons are not decisive for a reduction in meat consumption. |
Native Dutch: the more meat they eat, the more they would give an environmental reason for not eating meat. Chinese Dutch, the less meat they eat, the more report the environment as reason for not eating meat. In both samples, the vegetarians were more often women (about 70%), whereas the high meat-eaters were more often men (about 70%). |
Dyett, Patricia A., et al., 2013 [40] | Postal survey; (year not reported) | United States; N = 100 Population of self-reported vegans for more than 9 months living in different U.S. States. Age: 25–75 yrs old Vegans defined as individuals who used no meat, fish, or poultry, and who used dairy- or egg-containing products less than once per month. |
Discover the main reasons for adopting and maintaining a vegan lifestyle and to determine whether participants’ diet and lifestyle choices coincided with positive health indices and selected outcome assessment. | No prior info provided. | Reason for being vegan | Because environmental values (2%) | n.a. |
Turner-McGrievy, G. et al., 2016 [41] | online quota survey; year not specified; | Majority (90%) from the United States; N = 422 (n = 125 ULTRA, n = 152 FULL, n = 145 HALF) More ULTRA participants were men (63%) (vs. FULL (37%) and HALF (23%) |
Examine differences in current vegetarian and vegan diets, reasons for it and other dietary behaviors among long distance runners. | No prior info provided. | Participants asked to select all reasons for choosing their current diet that apply to them from a list of 12 reasons (including an option to select no reason or to write in an answer). |
More ULTRA participants (n = 25, 20%) reported that environmental concerns shaped their diet choice as compared with FULL and HALF participants (n = 36, 12%; χ2 = 4.4, p = 0.04). | n.a. |
Haverstock, Katie, et al., 2012 [48] | Food Choice Questionnaire; year not specified; | International online sample; N = 247 (196 = current animal product limiters and 51 former limiters) 211 = females; Age = 18 to 66 (M = 29.05, SD = 9.39) 222 = Euro-Americans. |
Similarities and differences between current and former animal product limiters. | No prior info provided. | Eight items concerning ethical food choice motives were also included [...] These ethical motives include animal welfare, environmental protection, political values, and religion. Likert scale: 1 = not important to 4 = very important. |
Importance given to environmental reasons to reduce or avoid meat. CURRENT LIMITERS: Vegans (n = 119) M = 3.10, SD = 0.68 Vegetarian (n = 54) M = 2.71, SD = 0.74 Pescatarian (n = 22) M = 2.79, SD = 0.75 FORMER LIMITERS: Now a regular meat eater (n = 16) M = 2.13, SD = 0.94 Now a occasional meat eater (n = 26) M = 2.67, SD = 0.80 Now a meat avoider (n = 4) M = 2.17, SD = 0.43 Now a pescatarian (n = 5) M = 2.54, SD = 0.88 |
Few gender differences. Women more strongly endorsed health and the environment motives than did men. |
Hoffman, Sarah R. et al., 2013 [39] |
Online survey; 2011 |
USA; People recruited through Facebook, Google, and vegetarian dedicated webpages. N = 312 Age: 18–69. (42% = age 20–29) 15.4% men, 84.6% women. 68.3% had some form of Higher Education. 86.5% White-Caucasian 56.7% had an income of <49,000 USD Vegetarian 49.4 (vegetarian) and 50.6 (vegan). |
Examine the differences between health and ethical vegetarians by comparing conviction, nutrition knowledge, dietary restriction, and years as vegetarian between the two groups. |
No prior info provided. | In order to place subjects into categories (i.e., health, ethical, or other), two multiple choice items were created: “The main reason I became a vegetarian was because of (check only one),” “The main reason I am (still) a vegetarian is because of (check only one).” Fourteen options were given in addition to the option “other” |
234 = ethical reasons (animal, ethics, religion, environment) (10 = the environment) as initial reason to become vegetarian. | Not reported. |
Izmirli, et al., 2011 [51] | Survey; year not specified; | 11 Eurasian countries; N = 3433 university students from 103 universities. 47% avoided some meat products. 4% vegetarians 0.4% vegans |
Determine the relationship between the consumption of animal products and attitudes towards animals among university students in Eurasia | No prior info provided. | Specify the major reason for meat avoidance like health concerns, religious instruction, concerns for the suffering of animals or for the environment. | 479 students (38.1%) gave the environmental reason. | Among “some meat avoidants” (total = 1147) 468 41% because of the environment. (Most chosen reason). Among “vegetarians” (total = 99) 9 (9%) because of the environment. Among “vegans” (total = 7) 2 (29%) because of the environment. |
Lindeman, Marjaana, et al., 2001 [44] | STUDY 1 Food Choice Questionnaire; year not specified. |
Finland; 82 female participants. Age: 17–3 years old. 30.4% semi-vegetarians and 25.3% vegetarians. |
The construction of food choice ideologies and the ways dietary groups endorse them. | No prior info provided. | Food Choice Questionnaire. Motives assessed among others: ecological welfare (including animal welfare and protection of nature). Subjects had to rate the statement “It is important to me that the food I eat on a typical day...” on a 4-point scale (1 = not at all important, 4 = very important). |
Ecological welfare. Semi and full vegetarians: M = 3, SD = 0.74 |
Vegetarians regarded ecological food choice reasons as more important than semivegetarians did, t(45) = −4.12, p < 0.001. |
Lindeman, Marjaana, et al., 2001 | STUDY 2 Food Choice Questionnaire; year not specified. |
Finland; N = 149 women. Age: 19–74 Mean age: 31.5. 44.3 full time students. 41.6% employed women. 16.8% semivegetarians and 10.7% vegetarians. |
Idem | No prior info provided. | Idem | Ecological welfare. Semi and full vegetarians: M = 2.94, SD = 0.80 |
n.a. |
Péneu, et al., 2017 [50] | Online survey. Ongoing web-based prospective observational cohort study launched in France in May 2009 with a scheduled follow-up of 10 years. | France; N = 22,935 (5688 men) |
Investigate the sociodemographic profiles of individuals reporting health and environmental dilemmas when purchasing meat, fish and dairy products, and compare diet quality of individuals with and without dilemma. | No prior info provided. | Respondents have to agree or disagree with the following statement: “I avoid purchasing [meat/fish/dairy products] for environmental issues” | 25% strongly agree or agree | |
Péneu, et al., 2017 | Asked to agree or not with “I am torn between purchasing [meat/fish/dairy products] to follow dietary guidelines or limit purchase for environmental issues”. | 31.94% said YES | - Women declared more dilemma in the case of meat than men. - In the case of meat, individuals with greater educational level and household including only one adult were more likely to report a dilemma. |
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Povey et al., 2001 [53] |
Open ended questionnaires; year not reported. | United Kingdom; Convenience sample; 111 respondents (25 meat eaters, 26 meat avoiders, 34 vegetarians, 26 vegans). |
Examine differences between the attitudes and beliefs of four dietary groups (meat eaters, meat avoiders, vegetarians and vegans) and the extent to which attitudes influenced intentions to follow a diet. | No prior info provided. | Record salient thoughts, beliefs and feelings towards these three diets: meat, vegetarian and vegan. A maximum of eight thoughts, beliefs or feelings could be recorded by participants. | MEAT DIET: 6/26 vegans and 6/26 meat avoiders named environmental problems as a salient belief towards eating a meat diet. VEGETARIAN DIET: 4/26 vegans mentioned a vegetarian diet to be environmentally friendly. VEGAN DIET: 12/26 vegans mentioned it to be environmentally friendly. |
n.a. |
Pribis, et al., 2010 [43] | cross-sectional, observational study; 2007 | United States; Andrews University (SDA institution) undergraduate students and their respective families. N = 609 participants. (35% male) Mean age = 31 years old. 4% vegans; 25% lacto-ovo vegetarians; 4% pesco-vegetarians; 67% non-vegetarians. |
Examine whether reasons to adopt vegetarian lifestyle differ significantly among generations. | No prior info provided. | Using a Likert Scale from 1 to 5 (strongly disagree [1]–agree [2]–no opinion [3]–agree [4]–strongly agree [5]) participants rated reasons why they choose a vegetarian lifestyle. Vegetarian reason: “vegetarian lifestyle is much more protective against the environment” |
Responses across generations: 11–20 years old: 3.95 21–40 years old: 3.69 41–60 years old: 3.75 61 or older: 3.79 |
Younger people (11–20 years) also significantly agreed more with the environmental reason (p = 0.025). |
Rozin, et al., 1997 [45] | Questionnaire; 1987 |
United States; N = 104 self-identified as at least reluctant to meat. 34 = male Mean age: 26.6 (SD = 8.95) |
Describe moralization in the domain of vegetarianism. | No prior info provided. | A list of 20 possible reasons for avoiding meat. Subjects indicated both current agreement (5-point scale ranging from disagree strongly to agree strongly) with each reason and, if relevant, the time of onset of the reason (“this was your first reason for avoiding meat,” “this was one of the earliest reasons for avoiding meat,” “this was not one of the earliest reasons for avoiding meat,” or “this was never a reason for avoiding meat”). Ecological reason: “I resist [avoid] eating “meat” because it is wasteful of resources to eat animal rather than vegetable products, especially in a world where people are starving.” |
5.8% “initial reason” to avoid meat. 38.2% strongly agreed (22.5% agreed) with ecological reason as current reason. |
n.a. |
Schösler et al., 2015 [36] * | Face-to-face interview; 2013 | Netherlands; quota samples of second- generation migrants: Turkish/Kurdish N = 350, Chinese/Hong Kongese N = 350, Native Dutch N = 357; 47–49% men |
Gender differences in meat consumption and reduction across ethnic group | Reasons for not frequently eating meat (selection of maximum 3 reasons out of 9 reasons) | It’s better for the environment’ was selected by 2% Turks, 26% Chinese, 38% Native Dutch | ||
Study 3: Schösler, de Boer, & Boersema, 2014 [46] * | Online survey; 2010 | Netherlands; quota sample, N = 1083, 50% men |
Cluster analysis based on type of eating-related motivation and profiling of segments related to meat consumption | No info before questioning | Reasons for not frequently eating meat (selection of maximum 3 reasons out of 9 reasons) | 19% selected ‘It’s better for the environment’ | 34% of those consumers who internalized the importance of the food-nature relationship agreed that eating less meat is better for the environment. |
Vanhonacker et al., 2013 [23] * | Online survey; 2011 | Belgium (Flanders); convenience sample, N = 221, 36% men |
Attitudes towards more sustainable food choices and consumer segmentation based on their self-evaluated ecological footprint. | Explanation of the concept ‘ecological footprint’ | Participants had to indicate environmentally-friendly behaviors (what they actually do) | 4% consume less meat per meal to reduce their ecological footprint | n.a. |
Verain et al., 2015 [47] * | Online survey; 2011 | Netherlands; quota sample, N = 942, 50% men. |
Segmentation of consumers based on sustainable food behaviors and profiling of segments | No info | Performance of sustainable food behaviors at least once a month in the previous year (‘yes’, ‘no’). | One meat-free day a week (56%) and smaller meat portions (52%) were the most popular sustainable food behaviors compared with other behaviors (e.g., buying organic meat or dairy) | Female gender (β = 0.08, p < 0.001), age (β = 0.21, p < 0.05) and variables on personal/social norms and subjective knowledge about sustainable food choices positively predicted curtailment behavior (average of four items: eating smaller portions of meat, eat less diary, eating less, one meat-free day a week) |
White et al. 1999 [42] | Survey; date not specified | United States; Random sample. N = 2500 women from each of the past decades’ graduating medical school classes 8% Self-described vegetarians |
Investigate the prevalence and characteristics of vegetarian subjects in the Women Physician’s Health Study and compare them with the omnivore cohort. | No prior info provided. | Self-categorized vegetarians were asked why they were vegetarian. | 32.1% cited environmental reasons. | n.a. |
Notes n.a.: not assessed; M = arithmetic mean; SD = standard deviation; SES = socioeconomic status. *: As reported by [55].