Department of Nutrition, Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, MA, USA.
BMC Pediatr. 2009 Dec 21;9:81. doi: 10.1186/1471-2431-9-81.
Parents are integral to the implementation of obesity prevention and management recommendations for children. Exploration of barriers to and facilitators of parental decisions to adopt obesity prevention recommendations will inform future efforts to reduce childhood obesity.
We conducted 4 focus groups (2 English, 2 Spanish) among a total of 19 parents of overweight (BMI >or= 85th percentile) children aged 5-17 years. The main discussion focused on 7 common obesity prevention recommendations: reducing television (TV) watching, removing TV from child's bedroom, increasing physically active games, participating in community or school-based athletics, walking to school, walking more in general, and eating less fast food. Parents were asked to discuss what factors would make each recommendation more difficult (barriers) or easier (facilitators) to follow. Participants were also asked about the relative importance of economic (time and dollar costs/savings) barriers and facilitators if these were not brought into the discussion unprompted.
Parents identified many barriers but few facilitators to adopting obesity prevention recommendations for their children. Members of all groups identified economic barriers (time and dollar costs) among a variety of pertinent barriers, although the discussion of dollar costs often required prompting. Parents cited other barriers including child preference, difficulty with changing habits, lack of information, lack of transportation, difficulty with monitoring child behavior, need for assistance from family members, parity with other family members, and neighborhood walking safety. Facilitators identified included access to physical activity programs, availability of alternatives to fast food and TV which are acceptable to the child, enlisting outside support, dietary information, involving the child, setting limits, making behavior changes gradually, and parental change in shopping behaviors and own eating behaviors.
Parents identify numerous barriers to adopting obesity prevention recommendations, most notably child and family preferences and resistance to change, but also economic barriers. Intervention programs should consider the context of family priorities and how to overcome barriers and make use of relevant facilitators during program development.
父母是实施儿童肥胖预防和管理建议的重要组成部分。探索父母决定采纳肥胖预防建议的障碍和促进因素,将为减少儿童肥胖提供信息。
我们对 19 名超重(BMI≥第 85 百分位)儿童的父母进行了 4 次焦点小组(2 次英语,2 次西班牙语)。主要讨论集中在 7 项常见的肥胖预防建议上:减少看电视时间、将电视从孩子卧室移除、增加积极的游戏活动、参加社区或学校体育活动、步行上学、增加一般性步行、减少快餐摄入。父母被要求讨论哪些因素会使每个建议更难(障碍)或更容易(促进因素)遵循。如果没有提示,参与者还被问到经济(时间和金钱成本/节省)障碍和促进因素的相对重要性。
父母为孩子采纳肥胖预防建议时,发现了许多障碍,但很少有促进因素。所有组的成员都确定了经济障碍(时间和金钱成本)是各种相关障碍之一,尽管对金钱成本的讨论往往需要提示。父母列举了其他障碍,包括孩子的偏好、改变习惯的困难、缺乏信息、缺乏交通工具、难以监督孩子的行为、需要家庭成员的帮助、与其他家庭成员平等、以及邻里步行安全。确定的促进因素包括获得体育活动项目、提供可替代快餐和电视的选择,这些选择是孩子可以接受的,争取外部支持、饮食信息、让孩子参与、设定限制、逐步改变行为、改变购物行为和自己的饮食习惯。
父母确定了许多障碍,这些障碍阻碍了他们采纳肥胖预防建议,最显著的是孩子和家庭的偏好以及对改变的抵制,但也包括经济障碍。干预计划应考虑家庭优先事项的背景,以及在计划制定过程中如何克服障碍和利用相关促进因素。