Kubik Martha Y, Gurvich Olga V, Fulkerson Jayne A
Temple University, College of Public Health, Department of Nursing, 3307 North Broad St, Philadelphia, PA 19140. Email:
University of Minnesota, School of Nursing, Minneapolis, Minnesota.
Prev Chronic Dis. 2017 Jan 19;14:E06. doi: 10.5888/pcd14.160235.
Television (TV) viewing is popular among adults and children, and child TV-viewing time is positively associated with parent TV-viewing time. Efforts to limit the TV-viewing time of children typically target parent rule-setting. However, little is known about the association between parent TV-viewing practices and rule-setting.
We used baseline height and weight data and survey data collected from 2011 through 2015 on parents and their 8- to 12-year-old children (N = 212 parent/child dyads) who were participants in 2 community-based obesity prevention intervention trials conducted in metropolitan Minnesota. Multivariable binary logistic regression analysis was used to assess the association between parent TV-viewing time on weekdays or weekend days (dichotomized as ≤2 hrs/d vs ≥2.5 hrs/d) and parent rules limiting child TV-viewing time.
Child mean age was 10 (standard deviation [SD], 1.4) years, mean body mass index (BMI) percentile was 81 (SD, 16.7), approximately half of the sample were boys, and 42% of the sample was nonwhite. Parent mean age was 41 (SD, 7.5) years, and mean BMI was 29 (SD, 7.5); most of the sample was female, and 36% of the sample was nonwhite. Parents who limited their TV-viewing time on weekend days to 2 hours or fewer per day were almost 3 times more likely to report setting rules limiting child TV-viewing time than were parents who watched 2.5 hours or more per day (P = .01). A similar association was not seen for parent weekday TV-viewing time.
For most adults and children, a meaningful decrease in sedentariness will require reductions in TV-viewing time. Family-based interventions to reduce TV-viewing time that target the TV-viewing practices of both children and parents are needed.
看电视在成人和儿童中都很普遍,儿童看电视的时间与父母看电视的时间呈正相关。限制儿童看电视时间的努力通常针对父母制定规则。然而,关于父母看电视习惯与制定规则之间的关联,我们知之甚少。
我们使用了2011年至2015年收集的基线身高和体重数据以及调查数据,这些数据来自参与明尼苏达州大都市地区两项社区肥胖预防干预试验的父母及其8至12岁儿童(N = 212对亲子)。多变量二元逻辑回归分析用于评估工作日或周末父母看电视时间(分为≤2小时/天与≥2.5小时/天)与父母限制孩子看电视时间的规则之间的关联。
儿童平均年龄为10岁(标准差[SD],1.4),平均体重指数(BMI)百分位数为81(SD,16.7),大约一半的样本为男孩,42%的样本为非白人。父母平均年龄为4