Russell Catherine G, Worsley Anthony, Liem Djin G
1Faculty of Health,University of Technology,Sydney,Level 7,235 Jones Street,Ultimo NSW 2007 (PO Box 123),Australia.
2School of Exercise and Nutrition Sciences,Deakin University,Melbourne,Australia.
Public Health Nutr. 2015 Apr;18(6):1018-27. doi: 10.1017/S1368980014001128. Epub 2014 Jun 2.
The objective was to investigate parents' motives for selecting foods for their children and the associations between these motives and children's food preferences.
Cross-sectional survey. A modified version of the Food Choice Questionnaire was used to assess parents' food choice motives. Parents also reported children's liking/disliking of 176 food and beverage items on 5-point Likert scales. Patterns of food choice motives were examined with exploratory principal component analysis. Associations between motives and children's food preferences were assessed with linear regression while one-way and two-way ANOVA were used to test for sociodemographic differences.
Two Australian cities.
Parents (n 371) of 2-5-year-old children.
Health, nutrition and taste were key motivators for parents, whereas price, political concerns and advertising were among the motives considered least important. The more parents' food choice for their children was driven by what their children wanted, the less children liked vegetables (β =-0·27, P<0·01), fruit (β=-0·19, P<0·01) and cereals (β=-0·28, P<0·01) and the higher the number of untried foods (r=0·17, P<0·01). The reverse was found for parents' focus on natural/ethical motives (vegetables β=0·17, P<0·01; fruit β=0·17, P<0·01; cereals β=0·14, P=0·01). Health and nutrition motives bordered on statistical significance as predictors of children's fruit and vegetable preferences.
Although parents appear well intentioned in their motives for selecting children's foods, there are gaps to be addressed in the nature of such motives (e.g. selecting foods in line with the child's desires) or the translation of health motives into healthy food choices.
本研究旨在调查家长为孩子选择食物的动机,以及这些动机与孩子食物偏好之间的关联。
横断面调查。采用经过修改的食物选择问卷来评估家长的食物选择动机。家长还需用5分量表报告孩子对176种食品和饮料的喜好程度。通过探索性主成分分析来研究食物选择动机模式。运用线性回归评估动机与孩子食物偏好之间的关联,同时使用单因素和双因素方差分析来检验社会人口统计学差异。
澳大利亚的两个城市。
2至5岁儿童的家长(n = 371)。
健康、营养和口味是家长选择食物的关键动机,而价格、政治因素和广告则是被认为最不重要的动机。家长越是受孩子喜好的驱动来为孩子选择食物,孩子就越不喜欢蔬菜(β = -0.27,P < 0.01)、水果(β = -0.19,P < 0.01)和谷类食品(β = -0.28,P < 0.01),未尝试过的食物数量也越多(r = 0.17,P < 0.01)。而家长关注天然/道德动机时情况则相反(蔬菜β = 0.17,P < 0.01;水果β = 0.17,P < 0.01;谷类食品β = 0.14,P = 0.01)。健康和营养动机作为孩子水果和蔬菜偏好的预测因素接近统计学显著性。
尽管家长在为孩子选择食物的动机上似乎是出于好意,但在这些动机的性质(例如根据孩子的意愿选择食物)或将健康动机转化为健康食物选择方面仍存在需要解决的问题。