De Lepeleere Sara, De Bourdeaudhuij Ilse, Cardon Greet, Verloigne Maïté
Department of Movement and Sport Sciences, Ghent University, Ghent, Belgium.
BMJ Open. 2015 Sep 7;5(9):e007209. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2014-007209.
To assess the association between specific parenting practices and related parental self-efficacy with children's physical activity (PA) and screen time. Parental body mass index (BMI), family socioeconomic status (SES), and child's age and gender were examined as possible influencing factors.
Cross-sectional.
January 2014, Flanders (Belgium).
207 parents (87.4% mothers) of children aged 6-12 years.
Specific parenting practices, related parental self-efficacy, and children's PA and screen time.
The majority of investigated parenting practices and related parental self-efficacy were not significantly associated with children's PA or screen time. However, children were more physically active if sports equipment was available at home (p<0.10) and if parents did not find it difficult to motivate their child to be physically active (p<0.05). Children had a lower screen time if parents limited their own gaming (p<0.01). The associations between parenting practices and related parental self-efficacy with children's PA or screen time were significant for parents with a normal BMI, for medium-high SES families and for parents of younger children. Furthermore, the association between the parenting relating factors and children's PA and screen time differed for boys and girls.
In contrast to what we expected, the findings of the current study show that only a very few specific parenting practices and related parental self-efficacy were associated with children's PA and screen time. It was expected that parental self-efficacy would play a more important role. This can be due to the fact that parental self-efficacy was already high in this group of parents. Therefore, it is possible that parents do not realise how difficult it is to perform certain parenting practices until they are faced with it in an intervention.
EC/2012/317.
评估特定育儿方式及相关的父母自我效能感与儿童身体活动(PA)和屏幕使用时间之间的关联。研究父母体重指数(BMI)、家庭社会经济地位(SES)以及儿童年龄和性别作为可能的影响因素。
横断面研究。
2014年1月,比利时弗拉芒大区。
207名6至12岁儿童的父母(87.4%为母亲)。
特定育儿方式、相关的父母自我效能感以及儿童的PA和屏幕使用时间。
大多数被调查的育儿方式及相关的父母自我效能感与儿童的PA或屏幕使用时间无显著关联。然而,如果家中有体育器材(p<0.10)且父母认为激励孩子进行体育活动并不困难(p<0.05),儿童的身体活动会更多。如果父母限制自己玩游戏,孩子的屏幕使用时间会减少(p<0.01)。对于BMI正常的父母、中高SES家庭以及年幼儿童的父母,育儿方式及相关的父母自我效能感与儿童的PA或屏幕使用时间之间的关联显著。此外,育儿相关因素与儿童PA和屏幕使用时间的关联在男孩和女孩中有所不同。
与我们的预期相反,本研究结果表明,只有极少数特定育儿方式及相关的父母自我效能感与儿童的PA和屏幕使用时间有关。预期父母自我效能感会发挥更重要的作用。这可能是因为在这组父母中,父母自我效能感本来就较高。因此,有可能父母在干预中面临某些育儿实践之前,并未意识到执行这些实践有多困难。
EC/2012/317