Liechty Janet M, Saltzman Jaclyn A, Musaad Salma M
School of Social Work, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, 1010 W. Nevada Street, MC-085, Urbana, IL 61801, USA; College of Medicine at Urbana-Champaign, University of Illinois, 506 S. Mathews Avenue, Urbana, IL 61801, USA.
School of Social Work, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, 1010 W. Nevada Street, MC-085, Urbana, IL 61801, USA; Department of Human & Community Development, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, 904 W. Nevada Street, Urbana, IL 61801, USA.
Appetite. 2015 Aug;91:200-8. doi: 10.1016/j.appet.2015.04.010. Epub 2015 Apr 11.
The purpose of this study was to examine associations between parental health literacy and parent attitudes about weight control strategies for young children. Parental low health literacy has been associated with poor child health outcomes, yet little is known about its relationship to child weight control and weight-related health information-seeking preferences. Data were drawn from the STRONG Kids Study, a Midwest panel survey among parents of preschool aged children (n = 497). Parents endorsed an average of 4.3 (SD =2.8) weight loss strategies, 53% endorsed all three recommended weight loss strategies for children, and fewer than 1% of parents endorsed any unsafe strategies. Parents were most likely to seek child weight loss information from healthcare professionals but those with low (vs. adequate) health literacy were significantly less likely to use the Internet or books and more likely to use minister/clergy as sources. Poisson and logistic regressions showed that higher health literacy was associated with endorsement of more strategies overall, more recommended strategies, and greater odds of endorsing each specific recommended strategy for child weight control, after adjusting for parent age, education, race/ethnicity, income, marital status, weight concern, and child BMI percentile. Findings suggest that health literacy impacts parental views about child weight loss strategies and health information-seeking preferences. Pediatric weight loss advice to parents should include assessment of parent attitudes and prior knowledge about child weight control and facilitate parent access to reliable sources of evidence-informed child weight control information.
本研究的目的是探讨家长健康素养与家长对幼儿体重控制策略态度之间的关联。家长健康素养低与儿童健康状况不佳有关,但对于其与儿童体重控制及体重相关健康信息寻求偏好之间的关系却知之甚少。数据来自“强壮儿童研究”,这是一项对中西部地区学龄前儿童家长进行的小组调查(n = 497)。家长平均认可4.3种(标准差 = 2.8)减肥策略,53%的家长认可所有三种推荐给儿童的减肥策略,不到1%的家长认可任何不安全的策略。家长最有可能从医疗保健专业人员那里获取儿童减肥信息,但健康素养低(与健康素养足够相比)的家长使用互联网或书籍的可能性显著更低,而更有可能将牧师/神职人员作为信息来源。泊松回归和逻辑回归显示,在调整了家长年龄、教育程度、种族/族裔、收入、婚姻状况、体重担忧和儿童BMI百分位数后,较高的健康素养与总体上认可更多策略、更多推荐策略以及认可每种特定儿童体重控制推荐策略的更高几率相关。研究结果表明,健康素养会影响家长对儿童减肥策略的看法和健康信息寻求偏好。向家长提供的儿科减肥建议应包括评估家长对儿童体重控制的态度和先验知识,并帮助家长获取可靠的循证儿童体重控制信息来源。