Oral Presentation 49th Nutrition Society of Australia Annual Scientific Meeting 2025

Understanding the barriers to plant-based dietary change: The role of meat-centric meal perception among adults in Australia and Denmark (129984)

Ramya Rao 1 , Gie Liem 2 , Qian Janice Wange 1
  1. Food Science, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark
  2. Deakin University, Burwood, VIC, Australia

Facilitating sustainable dietary transitions is crucial for addressing the climate crisis, yet changing individual eating behaviours - particularly in meat-centric food cultures - remains challenging (Ran et al,  2025). This study examines different psychological factors underlying plant-based eating, with a focus on meat-centric meal perception - the tendency to view meat as the essential component of a proper meal. Data were collected via an online questionnaire from 592 meat-eating adults aged 20 to 70 (evenly recruited across five age groups) in Australia (N = 325) and Denmark (N = 267), two of the world's highest meat-consuming countries. Participants completed validated measures of familiarity with plant-based meals, food neophobia, cognitive reflection, and meat-centric meal perception. A more meat-centric meal perception was correlated with consuming fewer plant-based meals in Australia r(323) = - 0.36, p < 0.001 and Denmark r(265) = - 0.42, p < 0.001. Mediation analyses showed that higher familiarity with plant-based meals was associated with a less meat-centric meal perception, which in turn was related to higher plant-based eating among Australians (indirect effect = 0.34, 95 % CI [0.183, 0.534]) and Danes (indirect effect = 0.45, 95 % CI [0.267, 0.673]). Food neophobia was associated with lower plant-based eating in both countries, with an additional negative indirect effect via meat-centric meal perception in Denmark. Cognitive reflection showed no significant association with either meal perception or plant-based eating. These findings highlight meat-centric meal perception as a key psychological barrier to plant-based eating and underscore the importance of familiarity and food neophobia in shaping meal perceptions, offering valuable insights for promoting sustainable dietary change.

 

  1. Ran Y,  Persson UM, Lindahl T, Jonell M, Brons A, Macura B, Candel J, Abu Hatab A, Röös E. Are interventions for environmentally sustainable dietary behaviours effective? A review. Environmental Research: Food Systems, 2 (3) (2025), Article 032001