Davis Rachel E, Cole Suzanne M, Blake Christine E, McKenney-Shubert Shannon J, Peterson Karen E
Department of Health Promotion, Education, and Behavior, Arnold School of Public Health, University of South Carolina, Discovery I, 915 Greene Street, Room 529, Columbia, SC 29208, USA.
Department of Nutritional Sciences, School of Public Health, University of Michigan, 1415 Washington Heights, Ann Arbor, MI 48109-2029, USA.
Appetite. 2016 Jun 1;101:104-13. doi: 10.1016/j.appet.2016.02.158. Epub 2016 Mar 2.
This mixed methods study sought to understand who makes decisions about whether preschool-aged Mexican American children engage in eating, outdoor play, sleep, and screen time behaviors.
Forty Mexican American mothers of children ages 3-4 participated in two interviews, during which both closed- and open-ended questions elicited perceptions of who made decisions for the four behaviors, as well as who was present, mealtime rules, and food choice values. Interviews were transcribed, coded for emergent themes, and compared across participants.
Participants generally perceived themselves to be primary decision makers for all four behaviors; however, food decisions often seemed to be made collaboratively with the child. Fathers were most likely to participate in evening television decisions. Other family members were rarely mentioned. Selecting foods that children liked was a strong food choice value, while cost was rarely mentioned. Participants appeared to have low perceived control over their child's behaviors relative to their perceived roles in decision making.
Mothers may be the primary audience for obesity prevention messages for preschool-aged, Mexican American children; however, health promotion programs may need to increase mothers' awareness of their control over children's behaviors. Understanding how children's behaviors are regulated is an important aspect of obesity prevention for low-income, Mexican American children.
这项混合方法研究旨在了解谁在决定学龄前墨西哥裔美国儿童是否参与饮食、户外玩耍、睡眠和屏幕时间行为。
40名3至4岁墨西哥裔美国儿童的母亲参与了两次访谈,期间封闭式和开放式问题引出了关于谁为这四种行为做决定、谁在场、用餐规则和食物选择价值观的看法。访谈被转录、编码以找出新出现的主题,并在参与者之间进行比较。
参与者普遍认为自己是所有四种行为的主要决策者;然而,食物决定似乎常常是与孩子共同做出的。父亲最有可能参与晚上看电视的决定。很少提到其他家庭成员。选择孩子喜欢的食物是一种强烈的食物选择价值观,而成本很少被提及。相对于他们在决策中的角色,参与者似乎对孩子的行为控制感较低。
母亲可能是针对学龄前墨西哥裔美国儿童的肥胖预防信息的主要受众;然而,健康促进项目可能需要提高母亲对其对孩子行为控制的认识。了解儿童行为如何被调节是低收入墨西哥裔美国儿童肥胖预防的一个重要方面。