Department of Family Medicine and Community Health, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, United States.
College of Liberal Arts, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, United States.
Appetite. 2018 Feb 1;121:163-172. doi: 10.1016/j.appet.2017.11.084. Epub 2017 Nov 8.
Having frequent family meals has consistently been associated with better health outcomes in children/adolescents. It is important to identify how intergenerational transmission of family meal practices occurs to help families benefit from the protective nature of family meals. Limited studies exist that explore the intergenerational transmission of family meal practices, particularly among racially/ethnically diverse and immigrant populations. This study explores how parents describe differences and similarities between meals "then" and "now", lessons they learned as children about family meals, lessons they passed onto their children, the challenges of carrying out family meals, and how families handle the barriers/challenges to intergenerational transmission of family meal practices. The study was conducted with a sample of African American, Native American, Latino, Hmong, Somali, and White families (25/category). Qualitative themes were explored with the overall sample, by race/ethnicity, immigrant status, and by time in the United States (US) as an immigrant. Parents overwhelmingly reported learning as children that family meals were important and conveying this message to their own children. Differences existed among racial/ethnic groups and time in the US as an immigrant. For example, Somali parents frequently endorsed having no challenges with intergenerational transmission of family meal practices. Immigrant parents in the US for a longer period of time were more likely to endorse learning/teaching about family meal importance, that the food eaten now is different than growing up, that a chaotic environment is a challenge to having family meals, and that they accommodate family member's schedules when planning family meals. Results demonstrate that exploring a parent's early family meal experiences may be important when intervening with parents from diverse racial/ethnic and immigrant populations when trying to improve or increase family meal practices.
经常一起用餐与儿童和青少年的健康结果始终呈正相关。了解代际传递家庭用餐习惯的方式对于帮助家庭受益于家庭用餐的保护性质非常重要。目前,很少有研究探索家庭用餐习惯的代际传递,尤其是在不同种族/族裔和移民群体中。本研究探讨了父母如何描述“过去”和“现在”的餐食之间的差异和相似之处,他们作为孩子时从家庭用餐中学到的经验教训,以及他们传授给孩子的经验教训、执行家庭用餐的挑战,以及家庭如何处理代际传递家庭用餐习惯的障碍/挑战。该研究是在一个由非裔美国人、美国原住民、拉丁裔、苗族、索马里裔和白人家庭(每类 25 个家庭)组成的样本中进行的。通过整体样本、按种族/族裔、移民身份和作为移民在美国的时间,探讨了定性主题。父母普遍报告说,他们作为孩子时就知道家庭用餐很重要,并将这一信息传达给了自己的孩子。不同种族/族裔群体和作为移民在美国的时间存在差异。例如,索马里裔父母经常表示,家庭用餐的代际传递没有任何挑战。在美国作为移民时间较长的移民父母更有可能赞同学习/教授家庭用餐的重要性、现在吃的食物与成长时不同、混乱的环境对家庭用餐构成挑战,以及他们在规划家庭用餐时会根据家庭成员的日程安排进行调整。研究结果表明,当试图改善或增加家庭用餐习惯时,对于来自不同种族/族裔和移民群体的父母,探索其早期家庭用餐经历可能很重要。