Yang W Y, Burrows T, MacDonald-Wicks L, Williams L T, Collins C E, Chee W S S
School of Health Sciences, Faculty of Health and Medicine, Priority Research Centre in Physical Activity and Nutrition, The University of Newcastle, Callaghan, NSW, Australia.
Department of Nutrition and Dietetics, School of Health Sciences, Faculty of Medicine and Health, International Medical University, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.
J Hum Nutr Diet. 2016 Aug;29(4):441-8. doi: 10.1111/jhn.12356. Epub 2016 Feb 16.
Childhood obesity is becoming more common as Malaysia experiences rapid nutrition transition. Current evidence related to parental influences on child dietary intake and body weight status is limited. The present study aimed to report, among Malay families, the prevalence of energy mis-reporting and dietary relationships within family dyads.
The cross-sectional Family Diet Study (n = 236) was conducted at five primary schools in central of Peninsular Malaysia. Each family consisted of a Malay child, aged 8-12 years, and their main caregiver(s). Information on socio-demographics, dietary intake and anthropometry were collected. Correlations and regression analyses were used to assess dietary relationships within family dyads.
Approximately 29.6% of the children and 75.0% parents were categorised as being overweight or obese. Intakes of nutrients and food groups were below the national recommended targets for majority of children and adults. A large proportion of energy intake mis-reporters were identified: mothers (55.5%), fathers (40.2%) and children (40.2%). Children's body mass index (BMI) was positively associated with parental BMI (fathers, r = 0.37; mothers, r = 0.34; P < 0.01). For dietary intakes, moderate-to-strong (0.35-0.72) and weak-to-moderate (0.16-0.35) correlations were found between mother-father and child-parent dyads, respectively. Multiple regression revealed that maternal percentage energy from fat (β = 0.09, P < 0.01) explained 81% of the variation in children's fat intake.
Clear parental dietary relationships, especially child-mother dyads, were found. Despite a significant proportion of families with members who were overweight or obese, the majority reported dietary intakes below recommended levels, distorted by energy mis-reporting. The findings of the present study can inform interventions targeting parent-child relationships to improve family dietary patterns in Malaysia.
随着马来西亚经历快速的营养转型,儿童肥胖现象日益普遍。目前关于父母对儿童饮食摄入和体重状况影响的证据有限。本研究旨在报告马来家庭中能量误报的患病率以及家庭二元组中的饮食关系。
在马来西亚半岛中部的五所小学进行了横断面家庭饮食研究(n = 236)。每个家庭由一名8至12岁的马来儿童及其主要照顾者组成。收集了社会人口统计学、饮食摄入和人体测量学信息。采用相关性和回归分析来评估家庭二元组中的饮食关系。
约29.6%的儿童和75.0%的父母被归类为超重或肥胖。大多数儿童和成人的营养素和食物组摄入量低于国家推荐目标。发现很大一部分能量摄入误报者:母亲(55.5%)、父亲(40.2%)和儿童(40.2%)。儿童的体重指数(BMI)与父母的BMI呈正相关(父亲,r = 0.37;母亲,r = 0.34;P < 0.01)。对于饮食摄入量,分别在父母二元组和儿童-父母二元组中发现了中度至强(0.35 - 0.72)和弱至中度(0.16 - 0.35)的相关性。多元回归显示,母亲来自脂肪的能量百分比(β = 0.09,P < 0.01)解释了儿童脂肪摄入量变化的81%。
发现了明确的父母饮食关系,尤其是儿童-母亲二元组。尽管很大一部分家庭中有超重或肥胖的成员,但大多数家庭报告的饮食摄入量低于推荐水平,且因能量误报而失真。本研究的结果可为针对亲子关系的干预措施提供参考,以改善马来西亚的家庭饮食模式。