Department of Nutrition, Institute of Basic Medical Sciences, University of Oslo, PO Box 1046 Blindern, 0316 Oslo, Norway.
Appetite. 2017 Oct 1;117:310-320. doi: 10.1016/j.appet.2017.06.031. Epub 2017 Jul 1.
The home environment is the first environment to shape childhood dietary habits and food preferences, hence greater understanding of home environmental factors associated with vegetable consumption among young children is needed. The objective has been to examine questionnaire items developed to measure the sociocultural home environment of children focusing on vegetables and to assess the psychometric properties of the resulting factors. Further, to explore associations between the environmental factors and vegetable consumption among Norwegian 3-5 year olds. Parents (n 633) were invited to participate and filled in a questionnaire assessing the child's vegetable intake and factors potentially influencing this, along with a 24-h recall of their child's fruit and vegetable intake. Children's fruit and vegetable intakes at two meals in one day in the kindergarten were observed by researchers. Principal components analysis was used to examine items assessing the sociocultural home environment. Encouragement items resulted in factors labelled "reactive encouragement", "child involvement" and "reward". Modelling items resulted in the factors labelled "active role model" and "practical role model". Items assessing negative parental attitudes resulted in the factor labelled "negative parental attitudes" and items assessing family pressure/demand resulted in the factor labelled "family demand". The psychometric properties of the factors were for most satisfactory. Linear regression of the associations between vegetable intake and the factors showed, as expected, generally positive associations with "child involvement", "practical role model" and "family demand", and negative associations with "negative parental attitudes" and "reward". Unexpectedly, "reactive encouragement" was negatively associated with vegetable consumption. In conclusion, associations between sociocultural home environmental factors and children's vegetable consumption showed both expected and unexpected associations some of which differed by maternal education - pointing to a need for further comparable studies.
家庭环境是塑造儿童饮食习惯和食物偏好的第一环境,因此需要更好地了解与幼儿蔬菜消费相关的家庭环境因素。本研究旨在检验用于测量儿童蔬菜消费社会文化家庭环境的问卷项目,并评估由此产生的因素的心理测量特性。此外,还探讨了挪威 3-5 岁儿童环境因素与蔬菜消费之间的关系。邀请家长(n=633)参与并填写了一份问卷,评估孩子的蔬菜摄入量和可能影响这一摄入量的因素,以及对孩子水果和蔬菜摄入量的 24 小时回忆。研究人员观察了孩子在幼儿园一天两餐中的水果和蔬菜摄入量。主成分分析用于检验评估社会文化家庭环境的问卷项目。鼓励项目产生了“反应性鼓励”、“儿童参与”和“奖励”三个因素。示范项目产生了“积极榜样”和“实用榜样”两个因素。评估父母负面态度的项目产生了“父母负面态度”因素,评估家庭压力/需求的项目产生了“家庭需求”因素。这些因素的心理测量特性总体上令人满意。蔬菜摄入量与因素之间的线性回归显示,与“儿童参与”、“实用榜样”和“家庭需求”呈正相关,与“父母负面态度”和“奖励”呈负相关,这与预期一致。出乎意料的是,“反应性鼓励”与蔬菜消费呈负相关。总之,社会文化家庭环境因素与儿童蔬菜消费之间的关系既有预期的也有意外的关联,其中一些关联因母亲教育程度而异——这表明需要进一步进行类似的研究。