Penilla Carlos, Tschann Jeanne M, Deardorff Julianna, Flores Elena, Pasch Lauri A, Butte Nancy F, Gregorich Steven E, Greenspan Louise C, Martinez Suzanna M, Ozer Emily
School of Public Health, University of California, Berkeley, 50 University Hall, Berkeley, CA, 94720-7360, USA.
Department of Psychiatry, University of California, San Francisco, Box 0848, San Francisco, CA, 94143-0848, USA.
Appetite. 2017 Oct 1;117:109-116. doi: 10.1016/j.appet.2017.06.016. Epub 2017 Jun 17.
Mothers' feeding practices are associated with their children's weight status, but little is known about the associations between fathers' feeding practices and children's weight status. Moreover, there is a dearth of research on Latino fathers' feeding practices and children's weight status, even though Latino children suffer some of the highest obesity rates in the U.S. We examined the associations between fathers' feeding practices and child weight status, conditional on mothers' feeding practices, within 174 Mexican American families with children aged 8-10 years. Parents completed the Parental Feeding Practices Questionnaire, which consists of four subscales: positive involvement in child eating, pressure to eat, use of food to control behavior, and restriction of amount of food. To assess child weight status, body mass index (BMI) was calculated and converted to age- and gender-specific percentile scores (BMI z-score). We fit four sets of regression models, one set for each of the four parental feeding practices subscales, with child BMI z-score as the outcome variable. Fathers' pressure to eat (b = -0.20, p = 0.04; 95% CI: -0.39, -0.01) and use of food to control behavior (b = -0.36, p = 0.02; 95% CI: -0.65, -0.07) were associated with lower child BMI z-score, and restriction of amount of food (b = 0.56, p < 0.001; 95% CI: 0.27, 0.84) was associated with higher child BMI z-score, after accounting for mothers' feeding practices. Fathers' positive involvement in child eating was not associated with child BMI z-score. These findings provide empirical evidence that fathers' feeding practices are independently associated with children's weight status, even when mothers' feeding practices are taken into account, and suggest that fathers' feeding practices also matter in regard to children's weight status.
母亲的喂养方式与孩子的体重状况相关,但对于父亲的喂养方式与孩子体重状况之间的关联却知之甚少。此外,尽管拉丁裔儿童在美国的肥胖率位居前列,但针对拉丁裔父亲的喂养方式与孩子体重状况的研究却十分匮乏。我们在174个有8至10岁孩子的墨西哥裔美国家庭中,考察了在母亲喂养方式的条件下,父亲的喂养方式与孩子体重状况之间的关联。父母双方完成了《父母喂养方式问卷》,该问卷由四个分量表组成:积极参与孩子进食、逼迫进食、用食物控制行为以及限制食物量。为评估孩子的体重状况,计算了身体质量指数(BMI)并将其转换为年龄和性别特异性百分位数得分(BMI z评分)。我们拟合了四组回归模型,每组模型对应四种父母喂养方式分量表中的一种,以孩子的BMI z评分为结果变量。在考虑母亲的喂养方式后,父亲的逼迫进食(b = -0.20,p = 0.04;95%置信区间:-0.39,-0.01)和用食物控制行为(b = -0.36,p = 0.02;95%置信区间:-0.65,-0.07)与较低的孩子BMI z评分相关,而限制食物量(b = 0.56,p < 0.001;95%置信区间:0.27,0.84)与较高的孩子BMI z评分相关。父亲对孩子进食的积极参与与孩子的BMI z评分无关。这些发现提供了实证证据,表明即使考虑到母亲的喂养方式,父亲的喂养方式也与孩子的体重状况独立相关,并且表明父亲的喂养方式在孩子的体重状况方面也很重要。