| Literature DB >> 32321977 |
Georgios Paslakis1,2, Candice Richardson1, Mariel Nöhre3, Elmar Brähler4,5, Christina Holzapfel6, Anja Hilbert5, Martina de Zwaan7.
Abstract
The aim of the study was to investigate the prevalence of, and attitudes toward, vegetarianism and veganism. We also assessed the association between vegetarianism/veganism and eating disorder, depressive, and somatic symptoms. A cross-sectional questionnaire survey in adults in Germany that was representative in terms of age, gender, and educational level was carried out. Data from 2449 adults (53.5% females) were included. Mean age was 49.6 (SD 17.1) years. A total of 5.4% of participants reported following a vegetarian or vegan diet. While the majority of participants agreed that vegetarian diets are healthy and harmless (56.1%), only 34.8% believed this to be true of vegan diets. The majority of participants also believed that a vegetarian (58.7%) or vegan (74.7%) diet can lead to nutritional deficiency. Female gender, younger age, higher education, lower body mass index (BMI), and higher depressive and eating disorder symptoms were found to be associated with vegetarianism/veganism. We did not find increased physical complaints in the group of vegetarians/vegans. Our results point toward a moderate prevalence of vegetarianism/veganism among the general population. Our findings suggest that health care professionals should keep eating disorder pathology, affective status in mind when dealing with individuals who choose a vegetarian/vegan dietary pattern.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32321977 PMCID: PMC7176641 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-020-63910-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Socio-demographic characteristics of survey participants.
| Variables | Survey participants |
|---|---|
| N (%) | |
| Gender | |
| Male | 1138 (46.5%) |
| Female | 1311 (53.5%) |
| 2449 (100%) | |
| Age groups [years] | |
| 18–24 | 198 (8.1%) |
| 25–34 | 378 (15.4%) |
| 35–44 | 397 (16.2%) |
| 45–54 | 475 (18.7%) |
| 55–64 | 458 (18.7%) |
| 65+ | 543 (22.2%) |
| 2449 (100%) | |
| Education [years] | |
| <12 | 1873 (76.5%) |
| ≥12 | 572 (23.4%) |
| 2445 (99.8%) | |
| Marital status | |
| Married, living with spouse | 1101 (45.0%) |
| Married, living separate from spouse | 70 (2.9%) |
| Single | 679 (27.7%) |
| Divorced | 368 (15.0%) |
| Widowed | 220 (9.0%) |
| 2438 (99.6%) | |
| Income groups [Euro/month] | |
| 0 to <1000 | 585 (23.9%) |
| 1000 to <2500 | 1523 (62.2%) |
| ≥2500 | 262 (10.7%) |
| 2370 (96.8%) | |
| Population size | |
| <5000 | 425 (17.4%) |
| 5000 to <50000 | 935 (38.2%) |
| ≥50000 | 1089 (44.5%) |
| 2449 (100%) | |
Participants’ attitudes toward vegetarian diets.
| Vegetarians/Vegans | Omnivores | Total | χ2 p | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Agree n (%) | Disagree n (%) | N | Agree n (%) | Disagree n (%) | N | Agree n (%) | Disagree n (%) | N | ||
| A vegetarian diet is completely healthy and harmless | 128 (97.0%) | 4 (3.0%) | 132 | 1232 (53.7%) | 1063 (46.3%) | 2295 | 1360 (56.0%) | 1067 (44.0%) | 2427 | 94.94 <0.001 |
| A vegetarian diet can lead to a nutritional deficiency | 34 (25.8%) | 98 (74.2%) | 132 | 1398 (60.6%) | 908 (39.4%) | 2306 | 1432 (58.7%) | 1006 (41.3%) | 2438 | 62.63 <0.001 |
| People who follow a vegetarian diet are seldom overweight | 98 (73.7%) | 35 (26.3%) | 133 | 1495 (64.8%) | 811 (35.2%) | 2306 | 1593 (65.3%) | 846 (34.7%) | 2439 | 4.35 0.022 |
| Individuals who follow a vegetarian diet are more productive | 105 (78.9%) | 28 (21.1%) | 133 | 590 (25.6%) | 1712 (74.4%) | 2302 | 695 (28.5%) | 1740 (71.5%) | 2435 | 175.25 <0.001 |
| A vegetarian diet is able to prevent disease | 111 (83.5%) | 22 (16.5%) | 133 | 815 (35.5%) | 1483 (64.5%) | 2298 | 926 (38.1%) | 1505 (61.9%) | 2431 | 122.80 <0.001 |
| A vegetarian diet is good for the environment | 123 (92.5%) | 10 (7.5%) | 133 | 1161 (50.5%) | 1139 (49.5%) | 2300 | 1284 (52.8%) | 1149 (47.2%) | 2433 | 89.00 <0.001 |
| A vegetarian diet is less cruel to animals | 117 (88.0%) | 16 (12.0%) | 133 | 1434 (62.3%) | 867 (37.7%) | 2301 | 1551 (63.7%) | 883 (36.3%) | 2434 | 35.78 <0.001 |
| People who follow a vegetarian diet are made fun of | 63 (47.4%) | 70 (52.6%) | 133 | 1117 (48.7%) | 1175 (51.3%) | 2292 | 1180 (48.7%) | 1245 (51.3%) | 2425 | 0.09 0.414 |
| A vegetarian diet is not tasty | 15 (11.4%) | 117 (88.6%) | 132 | 1101 (48.0%) | 1195 (52.0%) | 2296 | 1116 (46.0%) | 1312 (54.0%) | 2428 | 67.28 <0.001 |
| A vegetarian diet is expensive | 36 (27.1%) | 97 (72.9%) | 133 | 1403 (61.1%) | 895 (38.9%) | 2298 | 1439 (59.2%) | 992 (40.8%) | 2431 | 60.12 <0.001 |
| People who eat a vegetarian diet do so out of ethical motivation | 98 (74.2%) | 34 (25.8%) | 132 | 1579 (69.0%) | 709 (31.0%) | 2288 | 1677 (69.3%) | 743 (30.7%) | 2420 | 1.61 0.120 |
Participants’ attitudes toward vegan diets.
| Vegetarians/Vegans | Omnivores | Total | χ2 p | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Agree n (%) | Disagree n (%) | N | Agree n (%) | Disagree n (%) | N | Agree n (%) | Disagree n (%) | N | ||
| A vegan diet is completely healthy and harmless | 90 (67.7%) | 43 (32.3%) | 133 | 752 (32.8%) | 1538 (67.2%) | 2290 | 842 (34.8%) | 1581 (65.2%) | 2423 | 67.26 <0.001 |
| A vegan diet can lead to a nutritional deficiency | 80 (60.2%) | 53 (39.8%) | 133 | 1735 (75.5%) | 563 (24.5%) | 2298 | 1815 (74.7%) | 616 (25.3%) | 2431 | 15.66 <0.001 |
| People who follow a vegan diet are seldom overweight | 109 (82.0%) | 24 (18.0%) | 133 | 1531 (66.6%) | 767 (33.4%) | 2298 | 1640 (67.5%) | 791 (32.5%) | 2431 | 13.46 <0.001 |
| Individuals who follow a vegan diet are more productive | 73 (55.3%) | 59 (44.7%) | 132 | 455 (19.8%) | 1838 (80.2%) | 2293 | 528 (21.8%) | 1897 (78.2%) | 2425 | 92.14 <0.001 |
| A vegan diet is able to prevent disease | 85 (63.9%) | 48 (36.1%) | 133 | 671 (29.3%) | 1618 (70.7%) | 2289 | 756 (31.2%) | 1666 (68.8%) | 2422 | 70.07 <0.001 |
| A vegan diet is good for the environment | 114 (85.7%) | 19 (14.3%) | 133 | 1172 (51.2%) | 1119 (48.8%) | 2291 | 1286 (53.1%) | 1138 (46.9%) | 2424 | 60.27 <0.001 |
| A vegan diet is less cruel to animals | 114 (85.7%) | 19 (14.3%) | 133 | 1441 (62.8%) | 854 (37.2%) | 2295 | 1555 (64.0%) | 873 (36.0%) | 2428 | 28.69 <0.001 |
| People who follow a vegan diet are made fun of | 95 (73.1%) | 35 (26.9%) | 130 | 1469 (64.1%) | 821 (35.9%) | 2290 | 1564 (64.6%) | 856 (35.4%) | 2420 | 4.29 0.022 |
| A vegan diet is not tasty | 28 (21.2%) | 104 (78.8%) | 132 | 1461 (63.9%) | 825 (36.1%) | 2286 | 1489 (61.6%) | 929 (38.4%) | 2418 | 96.167 <0.001 |
| A vegan diet is expensive | 63 (47.4%) | 70 (52.6%) | 133 | 1675 (73.2%) | 614 (26.8%) | 2289 | 1738 (71.8%) | 684 (28.2%) | 2422 | 41.311 <0.001 |
| People who eat a vegan diet do so out of ethical motivation | 106 (79.7%) | 27 (20.3%) | 133 | 1670 (73.1%) | 614 (26.9%) | 2284 | 1776 (73.5%) | 641 (26.5%) | 2417 | 2.794 0.055 |
Comparison between vegetarians/vegans and omnivores.
| Vegetarians/Vegans | Omnivores | Statistics | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Male | 35 (26.3%) | 1103 (47.7%) | X2(1) = 23.174, p < 0.001 |
| Female | 98 (73.7%) | 1208 (52.3%) | |
| 133 (100%) | 2311 (100%) | ||
| 18–24 | 21 (15.8%) | 176 (7.6%) | |
| 25–34 | 38 (28.6%) | 340 (14.7%) | |
| 35–44 | 15 (11.3%) | 380 (16.4%) | X2(5) = 49.788, p < 0.001 |
| 45–54 | 33 (24.8%) | 442 (19.1%) | |
| 55–64 | 19 (14.3%) | 439 (19.0%) | |
| 65+ | 7 (5.3%) | 534 (23.1%) | |
| 133 (100%) | 2311 (100%) | ||
| <12 | 64 (48.5%) | 1805 (78.2%) | X2(1) = 61.531, p < 0.001 |
| ≥12 | 68 (51.5%) | 503 (21.8%) | |
| 132 (100%) | 2308 (100%) | ||
| 0 to <1000 | 33 (25.6%) | 550 (24.6%) | |
| 1000 to <2500 | 85 (65.9%) | 1436 (64.2%) | X2(2) = 0.903 p = 0.64 |
| ≥2500 | 11 (8.5%) | 251 (11.2%) | |
| 129 (100%) | 2237 (100%) | ||
| <5000 | 16 (12.0%) | 408 (17.7%) | |
| 5000 to <50000 | 48 (36.1%) | 886 (38.3%) | X2(2) = 4.214, p = 0.12 |
| ≥50000 | 69 (51.9%) | 1017 (44.0%) | |
| 133 (100%) | 2311 (100%) | ||
| BMI < 30 kg/m2 | 121 (91.7%) | 1943 (84.7%) | X2(1) = 4.732, p = 0.03 |
| BMI ≥ 30 kg/m2 | 11 (8.3%) | 350 (15.3%) | |
| BMI, mean (SD) | 24.0 (4.7) | 26.1 (5.0) | t(2423) = −4.555, p < 0.001 |
| 1.3 (1.4) | 1.0 (1.3) | t(2440) = 2.619, p = 0.01 | |
| <6 | 118 (91.5%) | 2154 (94.7%) | X2(1) = 2.502, |
| ≥6 | 11 (8.5%) | 120 (5.3%) | |
| PHQ-4, mean (SD) | 2.02 (2.31) | 1.54 (2.11) | t(140) = 2.327, p = 0.21 |
BMI: Body Mass Index, PHQ-4: Patient Health Questionnaire, EDE-Q8: Eating Disorder Examination Questionnaire.
Somatic symptoms (GBB-8) of vegetarians/vegans and omnivores.
| Variables | Vegetarians/Vegans mean (SD) | Omnivores Mean (SD) | Statistics |
|---|---|---|---|
| n | 133 | 2311 | |
| Total | 4.8 | 4.5 | t = 0.656 p = 0.51 |
| Exhaustion | 1.8 | 1.6 | t = 1.048 p = 0.30 |
| Gastrointestinal complaints | 1.0 | 0.7 | t = 1.467 p = 0.15 |
| Musculoskeletal complaints | 1.6 | 1.6 | t = −0.333 p = 0.74 |
| Cardiovascular complaints | 0.7 | 0.6 | t = 0.554 p = 0.58 |
GBB-8: Giessen Subjective Complaint List.
Results of the binary logistic regression analysis to predict vegetarianism/veganism based on gender, age, education level, population size, income, BMI, PHQ-4 score, and EDE-Q8 score.
| OR | Standard error | p | 95% confidence interval | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lower value | Upper value | ||||
| Constant | 3.437 | 0.845 | 0.144 | ||
| Gender | 1.028 | 0.236 | 0.248 | 0.625 | |
| Age | 0.359 | 0.007 | 1.015 | 1.041 | |
| Educational level | 0.843 | 0.201 | 0.242 | 0.533 | |
| Population size | 0.849 | 0.141 | 0.224 | 0.639 | 1.110 |
| Income | 1.102 | 0.175 | 0.347 | 0.603 | 1.195 |
| BMI | 0.901 | 0.028 | 1.043 | 1.163 | |
| PHQ-4 score | 0.834 | 0.043 | 0.829 | 0.981 | |
| EDE-Q8 score | 3.437 | 0.082 | 0.711 | 0.979 | |
BMI: Body Mass Index, PHQ-4: Patient Health Questionnaire, EDE-Q8: Eating Disorder Examination Questionnaire.