San Diego State University (SDSU)/University of California, San Diego (UCSD) Joint Doctoral Program in Public Health (Health Behavior), 5500 Campanile Drive, San Diego, CA 92182, USA (SDSU) and 9500 Gilman Drive, La Jolla, CA 92093, USA (UCSD); Institute for Behavioral and Community Health, 9245 Sky Park Court, Suite 221, San Diego, CA 92123, USA.
Institute for Behavioral and Community Health, 9245 Sky Park Court, Suite 221, San Diego, CA 92123, USA; San Diego State University, College of Health and Human Services, Graduate School of Public Health, Division of Health Promotion and Behavioral Science, 5500 Campanile Drive, San Diego, CA 92182, USA.
Soc Sci Med. 2017 Oct;191:125-133. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2017.09.004. Epub 2017 Sep 5.
Research shows that acculturation is important to Latinas' dietary intake and related behaviors. Although evidence suggests children may also play a role, it remains unclear whether children's acculturation is related to mothers' dietary intake/behaviors.
We examined the relationship between Latino children's acculturation and mothers' dietary intake/behaviors. We also examined the mother-child acculturation gap to identify dyad characteristics associated with mothers' diet.
Baseline surveys were collected in 2010 from 314 Latino mother-child (7-13 years old) dyads of Mexican-origin enrolled in a family-based dietary intervention in Southern California, USA. Mother's daily intake of fruits, vegetables, and sugary beverages, percent of calories from fat, weekly away-from-home eating, and percent of weekly grocery dollars spent on fruits and vegetables were assessed via self-report. Mothers' and children's bidimensional acculturation were examined using acculturation groups (e.g., assimilated, bicultural) derived from Hispanic and non-Hispanic dimensions of language. We also assessed the acculturation gap between mothers and children with the a) difference in acculturation between mothers' and children's continuous acculturation scores and b) mother-child acculturation gap typologies (e.g., traditional mothers of assimilated children).
Findings show that having an assimilated versus a bicultural child was negatively associated with mothers' vegetable intake and positively associated with mothers' sugary beverage intake, percent of calories from fat, and frequency of away-from-home eating, regardless of mothers' acculturation. Traditional mothers of assimilated children reported more sugary beverage intake, calories from fat, and more frequent away-from-home eating than traditional mothers of bicultural children.
Results suggest that children's acculturation is associated with their mothers' dietary intake/behaviors and traditional mothers of assimilated children require more attention in future research.
研究表明,文化适应对于拉丁裔的饮食摄入和相关行为很重要。尽管有证据表明,儿童也可能起到一定作用,但儿童的文化适应是否与母亲的饮食摄入/行为有关仍不清楚。
我们研究了拉丁裔儿童的文化适应与母亲饮食摄入/行为之间的关系。我们还研究了母子文化适应差距,以确定与母亲饮食相关的对偶特征。
2010 年,在美国南加州,对 314 对墨西哥裔母子(7-13 岁)进行了一项基于家庭的饮食干预研究,收集了基线调查数据。通过自我报告评估母亲每天摄入的水果、蔬菜和含糖饮料、脂肪卡路里百分比、每周外出就餐和每周购买水果和蔬菜的食品杂货支出百分比。使用语言的西班牙裔和非西班牙裔维度得出的同化和双文化等文化适应群体来检查母亲和儿童的二维文化适应。我们还通过以下方法评估母亲和儿童之间的文化适应差距:a)母亲和儿童连续文化适应得分之间的文化适应差异,b)母亲-儿童文化适应差距类型学(例如,同化传统母亲的传统孩子)。
研究结果表明,无论母亲的文化适应如何,具有同化儿童的母亲比具有双文化儿童的母亲蔬菜摄入量较低,含糖饮料摄入量较高,脂肪卡路里百分比较高,外出就餐频率较高。同化传统母亲的孩子比双文化传统母亲的孩子报告更多的含糖饮料摄入、脂肪卡路里和更频繁的外出就餐。
结果表明,儿童的文化适应与母亲的饮食摄入/行为有关,同化传统母亲的孩子在未来的研究中需要更多的关注。