Grzymisławska Małgorzata, Puch Elżbieta Alicja, Zawada Agnieszka, Grzymisławski Marian
Department of Anatomy, Poznan University of Medical Sciences, Poland.
Internal and Metabolic Diseases and Dietetics Department, Poznan University of Medical Sciences, Poland.
Adv Clin Exp Med. 2020 Jan;29(1):165-172. doi: 10.17219/acem/111817.
Conventional knowledge, resulting from observations and experience, maintains the conviction that there are gender differences in the acquisition, preparation and consumption of food. This review shows differences between the sexes in eating behavior, food choice and nutritional strategy which were conditioned by evolution and by intra-individual (biological or psychological) and extra-individual (socioeconomic and cultural) factors. Women manifest a more pronounced trust in healthy nutrition, greater engagement in controlling body weight, a higher tendency to eat in a group and in stressful situations, and they frequently experience frustration due to their own nutritional behaviors, which reflects higher social pressure and their attempts to reduce eating-related pleasure. On the other hand, men prefer fatty meals with a strong taste, and are directed mainly by the pleasure of consumption; they more frequently furtively eat sweet foods while watching television, use more dietary supplements and more frequently visit fast food restaurants. Nutritional behavior, styles of nutrition, dietary profiles, approach to nourishment, approach to the place of meal consumption, and the sources of nutritional knowledge all demonstrate associations with gender. Reciprocal interactions between gender and diet are conditioned by physiological, psychological and sociocultural factors. This system of reciprocal interactions includes feedback: biological sex and cultural gender shape one's diet and, reciprocally, one's diet affects the deepening or flattening of gender differences. The analysis of reciprocally interacting factors entangled in the formation of a nutritional model may also represent an important element of pro-health prophylaxis and should be used in medical and dietary practice. Males in particular should be informed and educated about health-promoting diets.
基于观察和经验得出的传统认知坚信,在食物的获取、准备和消费方面存在性别差异。本综述显示,男女在饮食行为、食物选择和营养策略上存在差异,这些差异受到进化以及个体内部(生物学或心理学)和个体外部(社会经济和文化)因素的制约。女性对健康营养表现出更明显的信任,更积极地控制体重,在群体中以及压力情境下进食的倾向更高,并且她们经常因自身的营养行为而感到沮丧,这反映了更高的社会压力以及她们减少与饮食相关愉悦感的尝试。另一方面,男性更喜欢口味浓郁的高脂肪餐食,主要受消费的愉悦感驱使;他们更频繁地在看电视时偷偷吃甜食,更多地使用膳食补充剂,也更频繁地光顾快餐店。营养行为、营养方式、饮食结构、营养观念、用餐地点的选择以及营养知识的来源都显示出与性别的关联。性别与饮食之间的相互作用受到生理、心理和社会文化因素的制约。这种相互作用的系统包括反馈:生物性别和文化性别塑造一个人的饮食,反之,一个人的饮食会影响性别差异的加深或减弱。对营养模式形成过程中相互作用因素的分析也可能是健康预防的重要组成部分,应在医疗和饮食实践中加以运用。尤其应该向男性宣传和普及促进健康的饮食知识。