Amerta Nutrition
Vol. 10 No. 2 (2026): AMERTA NUTRITION (Bilingual Edition)

Faktor-faktor yang Berhubungan dengan Konsumsi Sayur pada Anak Prasekolah Perkotaan di Indonesia: Factors Associated with Vegetable Consumption among Urban Indonesian Preschool Children

Herni Dwi Herawati (Nutrition Study Program, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, Alma Ata University, Yogyakarta)
Winda Irwanti (Nutrition Study Program, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, Alma Ata University, Yogyakarta)
Siska Ariftiyana (Nutrition Study Program, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, Alma Ata University, Yogyakarta)
Effatul Afifah (Master’s Program in Public Health, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, Alma Ata University, Yogyakarta)
Nurja Swastir (Nutrition Study Program, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, Alma Ata University, Yogyakarta)
Irma Manilet (Nutrition Study Program, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, Alma Ata University, Yogyakarta)
Eska Prasetyowati (Nutrition Study Program, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, Alma Ata University, Yogyakarta)
Yuyun Tuarita (Nutrition Study Program, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, Alma Ata University, Yogyakarta)



Article Info

Publish Date
09 Jun 2026

Abstract

Background: Low vegetable consumption has been identified as a risk factor for the development of obesity. Several studies have demonstrated that vegetable consumption can have a protective effect against chronic diseases and support weight management. According to the 2018 Basic Health Research, the average vegetable intake among Indonesia children was only 72.2 grams per day, far below the recommended 300 grams. Objectives: This study aimed to determine factors associated with vegetable consumption among urban Indonesian preschool children. Methods: A cross-sectional design with 181 children selected using probability proportional to size sampling based on inclusion and exclusion criteria. Daily vegetable consumption was assessed using a semi-quantitative food frequency questionnaire (SQ-FFQ). Other variables included availability of vegetables at home, maternal knowledge, age at first vegetable introduction, parental eating behavior (assessed using the parental modelling of eating behavior scale/PARM), and feeding practices (measured using the comprehensive feeding practices questionnaire/CFPQ). Bivariate analysis employed chi-square and multivariable analysis used binary logistic regression. Results: Most children consume fewer vegetables, with 141 children (77.9%) exhibiting insufficient vegetable intake, while 40 children (22.1%) had adequate vegetable consumption. Bivariate analysis indicated that age at first vegetable consumption (p-value=0.012), parental eating behavior (p-value=0.032), and maternal knowledge (p-value=0.000) were significantly associated with vegetable consumption. Multivariable analysis revealed that maternal knowledge was the dominant factor (p-value=0.000; OR=0.42; 95% CI=0.016-0.108). Conclusions: There is a relationship between the age at which vegetables are first introduced, parental eating behavior, and maternal knowledge with vegetable consumption habits among urban preschool children.

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Journal Info

Abbrev

AMNT

Publisher

Subject

Health Professions Medicine & Pharmacology Nursing Public Health Other

Description

Amerta Nutrition (p-ISSN:2580-1163; e-ISSN: 2580-9776) is a peer reviewed open access scientific journal published by Universitas Airlangga. The scope for Amerta Nutrition include: public health nutrition, community nutrition, clinical nutrition, dietetics, food science and food service management. ...