Division of Cancer Control and Population Sciences, National Cancer Institute, Bethesda, MD 20892-9671, USA.
Child Obes. 2013 Aug;9 Suppl(Suppl 1):S73-86. doi: 10.1089/chi.2013.0039.
Given the emerging global childhood obesity epidemic and the specter of a generation of children who will have a shorter life expectancy than that of their parents, recent research has focused on factors that influence children's weight status and obesogenic behaviors (i.e., eating, physical activity, and screen media use). Parents act as primary socializing agents for children, and thus growing evidence supports the role of parenting styles and practices in children's obesity-related behaviors and weight. Studying these processes in children and adolescents is important for several reasons. First, diet and physical activity behaviors and weight status track from childhood and adolescence into adulthood. Furthermore, diet and physical activity behaviors and weight status confer significant risk for cancer, diabetes, cardiovascular disease, and other chronic diseases. The purpose of this article is to describe the scientific gaps that need to be addressed to develop a more informed literature on parenting styles and practices in the domains of weight status and obesogenic behaviors, as identified by an expert panel assembled by the National Cancer Institute.
鉴于全球儿童肥胖症的出现以及这代儿童的预期寿命可能比他们的父母更短,最近的研究集中在影响儿童体重状况和致肥胖行为(即饮食、身体活动和屏幕媒体使用)的因素上。父母是儿童的主要社会化代理人,因此越来越多的证据支持父母教养方式和实践在儿童肥胖相关行为和体重方面的作用。研究儿童和青少年的这些过程有几个原因。首先,饮食和身体活动行为以及体重状况从儿童期和青春期一直持续到成年期。此外,饮食和身体活动行为以及体重状况会给癌症、糖尿病、心血管疾病和其他慢性病带来重大风险。本文的目的是描述需要解决的科学差距,以在国家癌症研究所召集的专家小组确定的体重状况和致肥胖行为领域,为更全面地了解父母教养方式和实践提供文献。