Morrissey Taryn W, Dagher Rada K
1Department of Public Administration and Policy,School of Public Affairs,American University,4400 Massachusetts Ave. NW,Washington,DC 20016,USA.
2Department of Health Services Administration,School of Public Health,University of Maryland,College Park,MD,USA.
Public Health Nutr. 2014 Dec;17(12):2759-68. doi: 10.1017/S1368980013003376. Epub 2014 Jan 6.
Maternal depressive symptoms negatively impact mothers' parenting practices and children's development, but the evidence linking these symptoms to children's obesity is mixed.
We use a large sample to examine contemporaneous and lagged associations between maternal depressive symptoms and children's BMI, obesity and food consumption, controlling for background characteristics.
Data from the Early Childhood Longitudinal Study-Birth Cohort (ECLS-B), a longitudinal study of children from infancy through kindergarten in the USA, were collected at four waves from 2001 to 2007, when children were 9 months, 2 years, 4 years and 5½years of age, through surveys, child assessments and observations.
A sub-sample of children from the ECLS-B is used (n 6500).
Between 17 % and 19 % of mothers reported experiencing depressive symptoms; 17 % to 20 % of children were obese. Maternal depressive symptoms were associated with a small decrease in the likelihood her child was obese (0·8 percentage points) and with lower consumption of healthy foods. The duration of maternal depressive symptoms was associated with higher BMI (0·02 sd) among children whose parents lacked college degrees.
Results indicate that mothers' depressive symptoms have small associations with children's food consumption and obesity. Among children whose parents lack college degrees, persistent maternal depressive symptoms are associated with slightly higher child BMI. Findings highlight the need to control for depression in analyses of children's weight. Interventions that consider maternal depression early may be useful in promoting healthy weight outcomes and eating habits among children.
母亲的抑郁症状会对母亲的育儿方式和孩子的发育产生负面影响,但将这些症状与孩子肥胖联系起来的证据并不一致。
我们使用一个大样本,在控制背景特征的情况下,研究母亲抑郁症状与孩子的体重指数、肥胖及食物消费之间的同期和滞后关联。
来自美国幼儿纵向研究——出生队列(ECLS - B)的数据,该研究是一项对从婴儿期到幼儿园阶段儿童的纵向研究,在2001年至2007年的四个时间点进行数据收集,当时孩子分别为9个月、2岁、4岁和5岁半,通过调查、儿童评估和观察来获取数据。
使用了ECLS - B中的一个儿童子样本(n = 6500)。
17%至19%的母亲报告有抑郁症状;17%至20%的儿童肥胖。母亲的抑郁症状与孩子肥胖可能性的小幅降低(0.8个百分点)以及健康食物摄入量较低有关。在父母没有大学学历的孩子中,母亲抑郁症状的持续时间与较高的体重指数(0.02标准差)有关。
结果表明,母亲的抑郁症状与孩子的食物消费和肥胖之间存在微弱关联。在父母没有大学学历的孩子中,母亲持续的抑郁症状与孩子略高的体重指数有关。研究结果凸显了在分析儿童体重时控制抑郁因素的必要性。早期考虑母亲抑郁情况的干预措施可能有助于促进儿童的健康体重结果和饮食习惯。