USDA/ARS Children's Nutrition Research Center, Department of Pediatrics, Baylor College of Medicine, 1100 Bates Street, Houston, TX 77030, USA.
Public Health Nutr. 2010 Jan;13(1):91-101. doi: 10.1017/S1368980009005916. Epub 2009 Jun 3.
Parents may influence children's fruit and vegetable (F&V) consumption in many ways, but research has focused primarily on counterproductive parenting practices, such as restriction and pressure to eat. The present study aimed to assess the association of diverse parenting practices to promote F&V and its consumption among pre-school children.
An exploratory analysis was performed on cross-sectional data from 755 Head Start pre-school children and their parents collected in 2004-5. Data included parent practices to facilitate child F&V consumption (grouped into five categories); parent-reported dietary intake of their child over 3 d; and a number of potential correlates. K-means cluster analysis assigned parents to groups with similar use of the food parenting practice categories. Stepwise linear regression analyses investigated the association of parent clusters with children's consumption of F&V, after controlling for potential confounding factors.
A three-cluster solution provided the best fit (R2 = 0.62), with substantial differences in the use of parenting practices. The clusters were labelled Indiscriminate Food Parenting, Non-directive Food Parenting and Low-involved Food Parenting. Non-directive parents extensively used enhanced availability and teachable moments' practices, but less firm discipline practices than the other clusters, and were significantly associated with child F&V intake (standardized beta = 0.09, P < 0.1; final model R2 = 0.17) after controlling for confounders, including parental feeding styles.
Parents use a variety of parenting practices, beyond pressuring to eat and restrictive practices, to promote F&V intake in their young child. Evaluating the use of combinations of practices may provide a better understanding of parental influences on children's F&V intake.
父母可能通过多种方式影响儿童水果和蔬菜(F&V)的消费,但研究主要集中在适得其反的育儿实践上,例如限制和强迫孩子进食。本研究旨在评估促进 F&V 的各种育儿实践及其与学龄前儿童 F&V 消费的相关性。
对 2004-2005 年收集的 755 名“先普计划”学龄前儿童及其父母的横断面数据进行了探索性分析。数据包括促进儿童 F&V 消费的父母实践(分为五类);父母报告的其孩子三天的饮食摄入量;以及一些潜在的相关因素。K-均值聚类分析将父母分配到使用食物育儿实践类别相似的组中。在控制潜在混杂因素后,逐步线性回归分析调查了父母群体与儿童 F&V 消费的相关性。
三聚类解决方案提供了最佳拟合(R2 = 0.62),在育儿实践的使用方面存在显著差异。这些聚类被标记为无差别食物育儿、非指导食物育儿和低参与食物育儿。非指导型父母广泛使用增强的可用性和可教时刻实践,但比其他聚类使用较少的坚定纪律实践,与儿童 F&V 摄入量显著相关(标准化β=0.09,P < 0.1;最终模型 R2 = 0.17),在控制混杂因素,包括父母喂养方式后。
父母采用多种育儿实践,而不仅仅是强迫孩子进食和限制实践,来促进其幼儿的 F&V 摄入量。评估实践组合的使用可能会更好地理解父母对儿童 F&V 摄入量的影响。