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Volume 30, Issue 1: February, 2003
Abstract
Intergenerational Transmission of Health: The Role of
Intrapersonal, Interpersonal, and Communicative Factors
Rajiv N. Rimal, PhD, MA
A model of household dietary behaviors based on adults’
and children’s intrapersonal, interpersonal, and communicative
factors is introduced and tested. To the extent that children’s
health behaviors are influenced by adults’ health behaviors,
it is hypothesized that children’s behavioral determinants,
including self-efficacy, knowledge, and use of health information,
will be affected by household adults’ behavioral determinants.
Household communication is expected to affect the behaviors
and the behavioral determinants of adults and children. Data
come from the Stanford Five-City Project. Structural equation
models revealed that adults’ dietary behavior was influenced
by their self-efficacy, knowledge, and discussion between
adults and children. Children’s dietary behavior was
influenced by their self-efficacy, knowledge, and use of health
information. Adults’ intrapersonal determinants of dietary
behavior predicted corresponding children’s measures.
Implications for health education efforts directed at children
include encouraging household discussion about health and
focusing on adults as agents of change as an integral campaign
strategy.
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