Using Evidence Mapping to Examine Motivations for Following Plant-Based Diets

Curr Dev Nutr. 2020 Feb 5;4(3):nzaa013. doi: 10.1093/cdn/nzaa013. eCollection 2020 Mar.

Abstract

Motivations to adopt plant-based diets are of great public health interest. We used evidence mapping to identify methods that capture motivations to follow plant-based diets and summarize demographic trends in dietary motivations. We identified 56 publications that described 90 samples of plant-based diet followers and their dietary motivations. We categorized the samples by type of plant-based diet: vegan (19%), vegetarian (33%), semivegetarian (24%), and other, unspecified plant-based diet followers (23%). Of 90 studies examined, 31% administered multiple-choice questions to capture motivations, followed by rate items (23%), Food Choice Questionnaire (17%), free response (9%), and rank choices (10%). Commonly reported motivations were health, sensory/taste/disgust, animal welfare, environmental concern, and weight loss. The methodological variation highlights the importance of using a structured questionnaire to investigate dietary motivations in epidemiological studies. Motivations among plant-based diet followers appear distinct, but evidence on the association between age and motivations appears limited.

Keywords: Food Choice Questionnaire; evidence mapping; flexitarian; motivations; plant-based diets; vegan; vegetarian.

Publication types

  • Review