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Table 4 Main and interactive effects of external eating and marketing indicators for vegetables on food consumption

From: The moderating role of food cue sensitivity in the behavioral response of children to their neighborhood food environment: a cross-sectional study

 

Healthful food consumption

Unhealthful food consumption

 

Estimate

95%CI

P

RR

95%CI

P

External eating (1 SD)

−0.42

(−0.96, −0.01)

0.07

1.08

(0.97, 1.20)

0.17

Vegetables Discount Frequency (1 SD)

0.13

(−0.18, 0.72)

0.54

0.99

(0.90, 1.10)

0.89

External eating x Discount frequency

−0.30

(−1.15, −0.09)

0.26

0.95

(0.85, 1.07)

0.42

External eating (1 SD)

−0.39

(−0.84, 0.06)

0.09

1.08

(0.97, 1.20)

0.15

Vegetables Display (1 SD)

−0.11

(−0.57, 0.35)

0.64

0.95

(0.85, 1.06)

0.35

External Eating x Display

0.55

(0.06, 1.04)

0.027

1.02

(0.91, 1.15)

0.71

External eating (1 SD)

−0.42

(−0.88, 0.04)

0.07

1.08

(0.97, 1.20)

0.16

Vegetables Regular price (1 SD)

−0.01

(−0.44, 0.42)

0.95

1.00

(0.91, 1.11)

0.92

External Eating x Regular Price

−0.22

(−0.83, 0.40)

0.49

0.94

(0.82, 1.08)

0.39

External eating (1 SD)

−0.03

(−0.94, 0.89)

0.95

1.19

(0.97. 1.46)

0.09

Vegetable Variety (1 SD)

0.21

(−0.67, 1.09)

0.64

0.97

(0.80, 1.19)

0.79

External Eating x Variety

−0.47

(−1.41, 0.48)

0.33

0.88

(0.71, 1.09)

0.25

  1. Results of regression models separately testing the main and interactive effects of external eating and marketing indicators for vegetables (n = 257) on health and unhealthful food consumption adjusted for child age, gender, language, and household income. RR Relative risk, CI Confidence Interval, SD Standard Deviation