Rhee Kyung E, Jelalian Elissa, Boutelle Kerri, Dickstein Susan, Seifer Ronald, Wing Rena
1 Center for Healthy Eating and Activity Research, Department of Pediatrics, University of California , San Diego, School of Medicine, La Jolla, CA.
2 Department of Pediatrics, Brown University Medical School , Providence, RI.
Child Obes. 2016 Apr;12(2):94-102. doi: 10.1089/chi.2015.0127. Epub 2016 Feb 19.
While authoritative parenting, which includes high levels of warmth and behavioral control, has been associated with lower risk of obesity, little is known about how general parenting impacts child weight loss during treatment. Our goal was to examine the relationship between several general parenting dimensions and 'decreasing /stable' child BMI during a 16-week family-based behavioral weight control program.
Forty-four overweight parent-child dyads (child age 8 to 12 years) enrolled in the program. Families were videotaped at baseline eating dinner in their home. Using the General Parenting Observational Scale (GPOS), meals were coded for several general parenting dimensions. Primary outcome was percent of children whose BMI 'decreased or stayed the same.' Multivariable logistic regression was used to determine the relationship between general parenting and decreasing/stable child BMI.
Forty families (91%) completed the program. Children had a mean BMI change of -0.40 (SD 1.57), which corresponds to a -0.15 (SD 0.20) change in BMI z-score (BMI-Z); 75% of children had decreasing/stable BMI. In the unadjusted models, lower parent BMI, higher parent education, and higher levels of parental warmth were significantly associated with decreasing/stable child BMI. In the multivariable model, only higher level of warmth was associated with increased odds of decreasing/stable child BMI (OR = 1.28; 95% CI, 1.01, 1.62).
Baseline parental warmth may influence a child's ability to lower/maintain BMI during a standard family-based behavioral weight control program. Efforts to increase parent displays of warmth and emotional support towards their overweight child may help to increase the likelihood of treatment success.
权威型教养方式,包括高度的温情和行为控制,与较低的肥胖风险相关,但对于一般教养方式如何影响治疗期间儿童体重减轻知之甚少。我们的目标是在一个为期16周的家庭行为体重控制项目中,研究几个一般教养维度与儿童BMI“下降/稳定”之间的关系。
44对超重亲子(孩子年龄8至12岁)参加了该项目。在基线期,对家庭在家中吃晚餐的情况进行录像。使用一般教养观察量表(GPOS),对用餐情况按照几个一般教养维度进行编码。主要结局是BMI“下降或保持不变”的儿童比例。采用多变量逻辑回归来确定一般教养与儿童BMI下降/稳定之间的关系。
40个家庭(91%)完成了该项目。儿童的平均BMI变化为-0.40(标准差1.57),相当于BMI z评分(BMI-Z)变化-0.15(标准差0.20);75%的儿童BMI下降/稳定。在未调整模型中,较低的父母BMI、较高的父母教育水平和较高的父母温情水平与儿童BMI下降/稳定显著相关。在多变量模型中,只有较高的温情水平与儿童BMI下降/稳定的几率增加相关(比值比=1.28;95%置信区间,1.01,1.62)。
在标准的家庭行为体重控制项目中,基线期父母的温情可能会影响孩子降低/维持BMI的能力。增加父母对超重孩子表现出温情和情感支持的努力,可能有助于提高治疗成功的可能性。