APA
Moreno Rodríguez, Vanessa P. & Sánchez Cabrero, Roberto & Abad Mancheño, Alfonso & Juanes García, Almudena & Martínez López, Fernando (2021-08 ) .Food and Nutrition Myths among Future Secondary School Teachers: A Problem of Trust in Inadequate Sources of Information.
ISO 690
Moreno Rodríguez, Vanessa P. & Sánchez Cabrero, Roberto & Abad Mancheño, Alfonso & Juanes García, Almudena & Martínez López, Fernando. 2021-08 .Food and Nutrition Myths among Future Secondary School Teachers: A Problem of Trust in Inadequate Sources of Information.
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12080/39654
dc.contributor.author |
Moreno Rodríguez, Vanessa P. |
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dc.contributor.author |
Sánchez Cabrero, Roberto |
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dc.contributor.author |
Abad Mancheño, Alfonso |
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dc.contributor.author |
Juanes García, Almudena |
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dc.contributor.author |
Martínez López, Fernando
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dc.date.accessioned |
2024-02-09T12:15:23Z |
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dc.date.available |
2024-02-09T12:15:23Z |
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dc.date.created |
2021-08 |
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dc.date.issued |
2021-08 |
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dc.identifier.uri |
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12080/39654 |
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dc.description.tableofcontents |
The Internet and social networks are full of nutrition information, offering people guidance
to make healthy eating choices. These sources always present themselves as a gateway to reliable
information on healthy eating; however, too often this is not the case. Far from being trustworthy,
there are usually plenty of food myths. A food myth is a widespread false belief about food, nutrition,
and eating facts that gives rise to certain behaviors, from fashionable trends to diets. Academic
training is a valuable tool to combat food myths and the pseudoscience linked to them, but educators
must participate in this battle. To test this idea, we analyzed the prevalence of nine highly popular
food myths held by 201 secondary school Spanish teachers. The aim was to assess whether expertise
in science areas prevents teachers from falling into these food misconceptions. Our study results
showed that food myths are held regardless of specialty area. The power of the media in popularizing
and spreading nutrition myths among educators may be the cause, even more potent than academic
training. We conclude that since scientific knowledge is not enough to erase food myths, we need
further actions if we aim to prevent the problems that food myths may cause. |
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dc.format |
application/pdf |
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dc.language |
eng |
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dc.rights |
CC-BY |
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dc.rights.uri |
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/deed.es |
es_ES |
dc.title |
Food and Nutrition Myths among Future Secondary School Teachers: A Problem of Trust in Inadequate Sources of Information |
es_ES |
dc.type |
info:eu-repo/semantics/article |
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dc.rights.accessrights |
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess |
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dc.identifier.location |
N/A |
es_ES |