Family upbringing has no impact on people’s food preferences
The effects of family upbringing on people's food preferences disappear as they start to make their own meal choices, to the point where they have no detectable impact by late adolescence, according to research carried out among a large group of older teenage twins by UCL and King's College London. Understanding the factors behind food preferences has important implications for politicians and clinicians. The results of this study mean that efforts to improve adolescent nutrition may be best targeted at the wider environment rather than the home, with strategies focused on increasing the availability and lowering the cost of 'healthier foods'. The study, published in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, found that genes have a moderate impact on food preferences in late adolescence, in keeping with earlier findings from young children. The research, which involved 2,865 twins aged 18-19 years, was the first to show how substantial influences of the shared family environment in early childhood are replaced by environmental influences unique to each individual by the time they enter young adulthood. Previous twin studies showed that aspects of the shared family environment played an important role in shaping children's food preferences but the relative influences of genes and the environment on older teenagers? preferences had previously been unknown. Dr Clare Llewellyn, (UCL Epidemiology & Public Health) one of the lead researchers, said: 'Understanding where food preferences come from is crucial for initiatives to improve healthy food choices.