MethodsX (Jan 2019)

A validated survey to measure household food waste

  • Erica van Herpen,
  • Lisanne van Geffen,
  • Mariska Nijenhuis-de Vries,
  • Nancy Holthuysen,
  • Ivo van der Lans,
  • Tom Quested

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6
pp. 2767 – 2775

Abstract

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To assess household food waste in large-scale studies with the aim to understand differences in food waste levels between households, surveys are often employed. Yet, survey measures rely on people’s awareness of their own food waste levels, draw upon their memory of instances of food waste, and can be subject to social desirability. Therefore, existing survey measures may not be optimal in measuring household food waste. The Household Food Waste Questionnaire has been developed to ameliorate these issues. It uses a pre-announcement to increase awareness of food waste, focuses on a short and specific time period (i.e. the past week), and specifies detailed product categories, whereas previous surveys mostly used general questions without reference to time period or product category. The amount of household food waste estimated using the Household Food Waste Questionnaire is likely to considerably underestimate the actual amount, so the method should not be used to obtain accurate waste amounts, but rather to distinguish differences between households and/or across time. Advantages compared to existing survey methods are that it: • Distinguishes better between households with low versus high levels of food waste • Correlates more highly with other measurements of household food waste (diary, kitchen caddy, photograph coding) Method name: Household food waste questionnaire, Keywords: Food waste, Questionnaire, Measurement, Consumer