To our knowledge, the present study is the first to attempt to assess self-efficacy in relation to health-promoting behaviors, such as physical activity and healthy eating among adolescent girls in Kuwait. The sample of adolescent girls assessed in this study demonstrated a moderate level of self-efficacy. However, those with the highest level of self-efficacy had better health-related behaviors, including more engagement in physical activity and consistent healthier dietary habits and food choices. This is in accordance with the results of several studies among adolescents that showed correlations between self-efficacy and increasing physical activity [22], increasing intake of fruits and vegetables, and engagement and adherence to weight control behaviors [23]. Self-efficacy is gained through knowledge, understanding, and skill development, and it is an important component in effective health communication and disease prevention interventions [24]. Self-efficacious people tend to be optimistic about engaging in behaviors, rather than focusing on negative thoughts about their inability to achieve a goal, are more likely to take on challenges easily, have a greater sense of commitment, and cope better with unexpected events or disappointment [24]. Non-efficacious people avoid challenges and fail at tasks perceived to be beyond their abilities, and they have little incentive to act or persevere in the face of difficulties [24]. Fitzgerald et al. [11] showed that higher self-efficacy was associated with ‘healthy food intake’ in adolescents aged 13–18 years. In addition, lower self-efficacy for healthy eating and higher peer support for unhealthy eating were associated with ‘unhealthy food intake.’ Nastaskin and Fiocco [25] found that high self-efficacy was associated with the lowest levels of fat and sodium intake.
We found that female students with the highest self-efficacy had higher scores on dietary beliefs; that is, they had a better comprehension of what constitutes healthy versus unhealthy dietary practices. Dietary beliefs can influence motivation and behavior; thus, it can guide the individual’s capacity to carry out actions and make decisions that are part of success in progressing to positive outcomes. This is consistent with the role of self-efficacy in decision making, outlined by Bandura’s social cognitive theory. Glasofer et al. [26] found that among adolescent girls (n = 110, mean age 14.5 ± 1.7 years; mean BMI 27.1 ± 2.6 kg/m2), self-efficacy (both general and eating-related) was negatively associated with self-reports of disinhibited eating behaviors (i.e., less frequent loss of control while eating in the past month). The researchers identified that those girls least likely to believe in their ability to influence outcomes were most vulnerable when faced with a toxic food environment such as a buffet meal [26]. Further, higher self-efficacy correlated positively with weight-conscious behaviors, such as eating more proteins as promoted by diet culture [26]. Several studies showed that self-efficacy was positively associated with healthy eating behaviors and negatively with unhealthy eating behaviors. Among female adolescents in Minnesota, self-efficacy toward making healthy food choices was significantly positively related to calcium intake [27]. Moreover, another study showed that self-efficacy toward low-fat milk consumption was correlated positively with low-fat milk consumption and negatively with sweetened beverages consumption [28]. In this study, self-efficacy toward health and nutrition was positively correlated with healthy eating habits and physical activity, and negatively with BMI.
We found that students with sufficient nutrition knowledge about healthy and unhealthy foods and dietary habits had better eating habits. Musaiger et al. [9] found that one of the main barriers to healthy eating among adolescents was not having enough information on what constitutes a healthy diet. Wardle et al. [14] reported that nutritional knowledge was associated with higher intakes of fruits and vegetables and less intake of fat. Grosso et al. [12] demonstrated that improving nutrition knowledge in children and adolescents may lead them to adopt healthier eating behaviors. Contrary to our expectation, we did not find a relationship between nutrition knowledge and self-efficacy. Among the adolescent girls, we identified a gap in knowledge about dietary fiber, protein, and energy contents of food, which may indicate that they face difficulties in translating nutritional advice into food choices that improve their diet [29]. The overall nutrition knowledge in our sample was low, similar to that in previous reports among Kuwaiti adolescents and college students [30, 31]. We also found that the father’s educational level was positively associated with students’ level of nutritional knowledge [31]. The education of the father may reflect his high awareness and acquaintance with healthy nutrition and its impact on family health, and thus, may influence their children’s knowledge. Nutritional knowledge may be a predisposing factor for eating behaviors; however, voluntary behavior improvement requires motivation, ability, and opportunity to improve one’s behavior. For example, having more experience with meal preparation and kitchen experiences increase confidence and independence in dietary decisions [32]. Lack of nutritional knowledge may be due to the lack of knowledge on nutrition-specific information related to dietary concepts more than those gained with a general understanding developed through the family environment or peer pressures [11]. In support of these concepts, students from the Hawally governorate showed better nutritional knowledge scores than those from the other two governorates in terms of nutritional knowledge and dietary beliefs. We speculate that this is because it was the only school that reported providing a nutrition class in their curriculum. The school environment can be an important setting for providing, promoting, and supporting healthy lifestyles among youth [33]. It was clear from the students’ responses about their source of information that there was a lack of a reliable source for this age group, as the majority of the female students reported getting information on nutrition from social media (43.6%) and rarely getting any information on nutrition from schools (10.1%) or health professionals (26.5%).
In support of the above findings, we found that self-efficacy differed significantly according to governorates, and the governorate was found to be a major correlate in the multivariate regression model. Students from Al-Jahra scored the lowest in dietary habits and belief scores, physical activity, and nutrition knowledge. Students from the Asema governorate scored the lowest in SES. These observations can be partly explained by the fact that each governorate in Kuwait is characterized by special demographic and socio-cultural features. Similar to the results of a prior national survey, we found that according to the variations in parental educational levels among governorates, 28.7% of the Kuwaiti residents in Al-Jahra had received only primary education or less, whereas intermediate or secondary education was the dominant education category in other governorates, and over 40% of respondents in Asema and Hawally reported having received college education or higher [15]. Much of the variations found in SES between governorates may be due to sociodemographic characteristics, family dynamics, and parenting style, which need further exploration in future studies [34, 35].
The prevalence of overweight and obesity (42.6%) was high in our sample, similar to those reported at the national level [1]. This can be partly explained by the poor eating habits found among the adolescent girls, evidenced by very low consumption of fruits and vegetables and high frequency of fast food intake, snacking on sweets, and drinking sugary beverages. These findings are similar to those reported in earlier surveys [8]. Many factors increase fast food consumption among adolescents in Kuwait, including the availability of fast food restaurants 24 hours per day and 7 days per week, accessibility by home delivery, and the low prices [36]. In our sample, snack components were mainly sweets such as candies, chocolate, and ice creams (41.5%). The preference for sweets may be related to sex; as adolescent girls, hormonal changes may affect food choices and desires. Similarly, a preference for sweets as a snack choice was reported in Bahrain, where female students consumed sweets and chocolates more than males, and the majority of the female students reported that they consumed sweets and chocolates daily [37]. Stress was also shown to affect adolescents’ food choices, but self-efficacy may be the moderator between stress and food intake [25].
Notably, in our sample, BMI was negatively associated with self-efficacy as shown by other researchers [38, 39]; however, this relationship did not remain after considering all the various covariates in the multivariate regression model. In fact, there was no difference in weight status among SES tertiles in our sample. Our data showed that the relationship between weight status and self-efficacy could be modulated by physical activity, dietary beliefs, HES, and interacting factors related to the variations in the governorate or school location. All these factors may individually or synergistically affect weight status and susceptibility to overweight or obesity. Therefore, it is difficult to tease out an independent relationship.
Overall, physical activity levels were moderate in our sample at a higher level in the private school. Physical activity scores showed that a majority (81%) of participants spent their free time engaging in sedentary activities such as listening to music and using their tablets, laptops, and computers, and only 10% spent their free time engaging in high-level physical activities. In addition, more than a third of the sample spent more than six hours per day, engaging in sedentary activities. These observations are similar to those of previous studies conducted among adolescents [8, 38], which showed that adolescents’ lifestyle habits consisted of spending several hours engaging in sedentary activities. Women are faced with more barriers to physical activity than men in Arab countries [9]. Some of the main barriers that were perceived to be somewhat important or important among female adolescents in Kuwait were “not having the time to be physically active,” “the climate is not suitable for exercising,” the “lack of motivation for physical activity,” “less support from teachers,” and the “lack of time.” Similarly, we noted that increasing engagement in physical activity and decreasing sedentary behaviors among female adolescents are areas that need attention to promote a healthier and happier school environment among them. Expressing boredom and tiredness in relation to their PE classes, demonstrated that the students lacked motivation and had low self-efficacy.
Self-efficacy could be a primary target area for interventions leading to healthier lifestyle habits among adolescents. Particularly, combating the growing problem of obesity in adolescents in Kuwait is a public health priority. However, Boodai et al. [40] found poor adherence to obesity interventions among adolescents with obesity and their families in Kuwait, and their engagement in the offered interventions was limited. Adolescents and their parents expressed a low degree of concern about obesity, especially with respect to the fact that health-related quality of life was not impaired compared to that of their peers with healthy weights [40]. Furthermore, Al-Isa et al. [41] found multiple cardiometabolic risk factors in adolescents with obesity in Kuwait. Therefore, to implement effective interventions among adolescents, researchers should begin with a period of efficacy building, followed by a period of behavior change to yield maximum results. Furthermore, programs with such a structure should be evaluated in a subsequent randomized controlled trial [42].
The strengths of this study are: we collected data from 3 different schools in the largest governorates in Kuwait and used locally validated scales to measure SES and health-related behaviors. The limitations were: the sample consisted of only adolescent girls aged 13–19 years old, and therefore, the results may not be generalizable to adolescent males or younger females. Due to the recruitment strategy, these results may not be representative of their schools or their governorates and can only be considered as results of a pilot study. Therefore, future larger studies are warranted to determine these relationships in a more randomized sample using a cluster sampling method. This would require national efforts from the Ministry of Education to facilitate research, as cooperation from the school administration was very limited. In addition, due to the cross-sectional nature of this analysis, we can only infer associations among these variables but not a causal relationship. Future research should use a larger sample size to test statistical assumptions and evaluate the generalizability of results. Finally, prospective interventional studies should assess whether a change in self-efficacy may increase participation and adherence to health-promoting interventions.