School principals' perceptions of adolescents' eating behaviors in two Spanish cities: a qualitative study based on the neo-ecological theory
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Abstract
Understanding of the social and environmental factors that shape adolescents’ eating behaviors is a prerequisite
for developing effective and evidence-based public health interventions. School principals, given their profound
comprehension of the internal and external dynamics of schools, serve as key informants in this context. Our aim
was to investigate, through the lens of neo-ecological theory, the perceptions of school principals regarding
adolescents’ eating behaviors in two Spanish cities. We conducted 12 interviews with key informants –seven
women and five men– who worked as school principals of socioeconomically diverse schools in Madrid and
Bilbao. The analysis employed a neo-ecological theoretical framework in conjunction with Corbin and Strauss’s
grounded theory coding strategies. At the microsystem level, the absence of family meals and the social mediadriven
beauty standards shaped adolescents’ eating behaviors. At the mesosystem level, interactions between
home and school food environments played a key role. At the exosystem level, schools faced structural barriers to
implementing health promotion strategies. At the macrosystem level, the food industry exerted influence through
food delivery services and the promotion of unhealthy foods, affecting adolescents’ dietary choices both at school
and at home. These findings highlight the need for public health interventions to go beyond the school and family
environments, addressing the growing impact of virtual environments and the food industry on adolescents’
eating behaviors.
Bibliographic citation
González-Salgado, I. de L., Rivera-Navarro, J., Díez, J., & Gravina, L. (2025). School principals’ perceptions of adolescents’ eating behaviors in two Spanish cities: a qualitative study based on the neo-ecological theory. In Appetite (Vol. 212, p. 108013). Elsevier BV. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.appet.2025.108013







