1Department of Family Medicine and Community Health,University of Minnesota Medical School,Phillips Wangensteen Building,516 Delaware Street SE,Minneapolis,MN 55455,USA.
2Department of Nutrition,University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill,Chapel Hill,NC,USA.
Public Health Nutr. 2017 Dec;20(18):3275-3284. doi: 10.1017/S1368980017002348. Epub 2017 Sep 14.
Having frequent family dinners is associated with better diet quality in children; however, it is unknown whether the frequency of certain family meal types (i.e. dinner) is more strongly associated with better child weight and diet quality compared with other meal types (i.e. breakfast, lunch). Thus, the current study examined the frequency of eating breakfast, lunch or dinner family meals and associations with pre-school children's overall diet quality (HEI-2010) and BMI percentile.
Cross-sectional baseline data (2012-2014) from two randomized controlled childhood obesity prevention trials, NET-Works and GROW, were analysed together.
Studies were carried out in community and in-home settings in urban areas of Minnesota and Tennessee, USA.
Parent-child (ages 2-5 years) pairs from Minnesota (n 222 non-Hispanics; n 312 Hispanics) and Tennessee (n 545 Hispanics; n 55 non-Hispanics) participated in the study.
Over 80 % of families ate breakfast or lunch family meals at least once per week. Over 65 % of families ate dinner family meals ≥5 times/week. Frequency of breakfast family meals and total weekly family meals were significantly associated with healthier diet quality for non-Hispanic pre-school children (P<0·05), but not for Hispanic children. Family meal frequency by meal type was not associated with BMI percentile for non-Hispanic or Hispanic pre-school children.
Breakfast family meal frequency and total weekly family meal frequency were associated with healthier diet quality in non-Hispanic pre-school children but not in Hispanic children. Longitudinal research is needed to clarify the association between family meal type and child diet quality and BMI percentile.
频繁共进家庭晚餐与儿童饮食质量改善相关;然而,目前尚不清楚与其他餐型(如早餐、午餐)相比,特定的家庭餐型(如晚餐)的频率是否与儿童体重和饮食质量的改善更相关。因此,本研究调查了食用早餐、午餐或晚餐家庭餐的频率,并探讨其与学龄前儿童整体饮食质量(HEI-2010)和 BMI 百分位的关联。
对两项随机对照儿童肥胖预防试验(NET-Works 和 GROW)的横断面基线数据(2012-2014 年)进行了分析。
研究在美国明尼苏达州和田纳西州的城市社区和家庭环境中进行。
来自明尼苏达州(非西班牙裔 222 对,西班牙裔 312 对)和田纳西州(西班牙裔 545 对,非西班牙裔 55 对)的父母-儿童(年龄 2-5 岁)配对参与了研究。
超过 80%的家庭每周至少有一次食用早餐或午餐家庭餐。超过 65%的家庭每周至少食用五次晚餐家庭餐。非西班牙裔学龄前儿童早餐家庭餐频率和每周总家庭餐频率与更健康的饮食质量显著相关(P<0.05),但对西班牙裔儿童则不然。不同餐型的家庭餐频率与非西班牙裔或西班牙裔学龄前儿童的 BMI 百分位均无关联。
早餐家庭餐频率和每周总家庭餐频率与非西班牙裔学龄前儿童更健康的饮食质量相关,但与西班牙裔儿童无关。需要进行纵向研究来阐明家庭餐型与儿童饮食质量和 BMI 百分位的关联。