Department of Family Medicine and Community Health, University of Minnesota Medical School, 717 Delaware Street SE, Room 425, Minneapolis, MN, 55414, USA.
University of Minnesota, Humphreys Institute, Minneapolis, USA.
Int J Behav Nutr Phys Act. 2018 Jan 16;15(1):7. doi: 10.1186/s12966-017-0629-1.
Although prior research suggests that stress may play a role in parent's use of food-related parenting practices, it is unclear whether certain types of stress (e.g., transient, chronic) result in different food-related parenting practices. Identifying whether and how transient (i.e., momentary; parent/child conflict) and chronic (i.e., long-term; unemployment >6 months) sources of stress are related to parent food-related parenting practices is important with regard to childhood obesity. This is particularly important within racially/ethnically diverse parents who may be more likely to experience both types of stress and who have higher levels of obesity and related health problems. The current study examined the association between transient and chronic stressors and food-related parenting practices in a racially/ethnically diverse and immigrant sample.
The current study is a cross-sectional, mixed-methods study using ecological momentary assessment (EMA). Parents (mean age = 35; 95% mothers) of children ages 5-7 years old (n = 61) from six racial/ethnic groups (African American, American Indian, Hispanic, Hmong, Somali, White) participated in this ten-day in-home observation with families.
Transient stressors, specifically interpersonal conflicts, had significant within-day effects on engaging in more unhealthful food-related parenting practices the same evening with across-day effects weakening by day three. In contrast, financial transient stressors had stronger across-day effects. Chronic stressors, including stressful life events were not consistently associated with more unhealthful food-related parenting practices.
Transient sources of stress were significantly associated with food-related parenting practices in racially/ethnically diverse and immigrant households. Chronic stressors were not consistently associated with food-related parenting practices. Future research and interventions may want to assess for transient sources of stress in parents and target these momentary factors in order to promote healthful food-related parenting practices.
尽管先前的研究表明,压力可能在父母使用与食物相关的育儿实践中起作用,但目前尚不清楚某些类型的压力(例如,短暂的、慢性的)是否会导致不同的与食物相关的育儿实践。确定短暂的(即瞬间的;父母/孩子冲突)和慢性的(即长期的;失业>6 个月)压力源是否以及如何与父母与食物相关的育儿实践相关,对于儿童肥胖症而言是很重要的。这在种族/民族多样化的父母中尤为重要,因为他们可能更有可能同时经历这两种类型的压力,并且肥胖症及相关健康问题的发生率更高。本研究考察了在种族/民族多样化和移民样本中,短暂和慢性压力源与与食物相关的育儿实践之间的关联。
本研究是一项使用生态瞬时评估(EMA)的横断面混合方法研究。来自六个种族/民族群体(非裔美国人、美洲原住民、西班牙裔、苗族、索马里裔、白人)的 5-7 岁儿童的父母(平均年龄=35 岁;95%为母亲)参加了这项为期十天的家庭观察研究。
短暂的压力源,特别是人际冲突,在当天晚上就会对参与更不健康的与食物相关的育儿实践产生显著的日内影响,而到第三天这种日间影响会减弱。相比之下,财务上的短暂压力源具有更强的跨日影响。慢性压力源,包括生活压力事件,与更不健康的与食物相关的育儿实践之间没有始终保持一致的关联。
短暂的压力源与种族/民族多样化和移民家庭中的与食物相关的育儿实践显著相关。慢性压力源与与食物相关的育儿实践之间没有始终保持一致的关联。未来的研究和干预措施可能需要评估父母的短暂压力源,并针对这些短暂因素进行干预,以促进健康的与食物相关的育儿实践。