Kracht Chelsea L, Swyden Katheryn J, Weedn Ashley E, Salvatore Alicia L, Terry Robert A, Sisson Susan B
Department of Nutritional Sciences, College of Allied Health, University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, Oklahoma City, OK.
Department of Pediatrics, College of Medicine, University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, Oklahoma City, OK.
Curr Dev Nutr. 2018 Aug 9;2(9):nzy061. doi: 10.1093/cdn/nzy061. eCollection 2018 Sep.
The family environment is influential for a child's healthy development through parent and sibling influences on feeding practices. Multiple-child households may protect against unhealthy feeding practices, but additional children contribute to higher maternal stress. Households of married parents may decrease maternal stress by sharing parental demands.
We aimed to evaluate the collective influence of maternal stress, marital status, and number of children on feeding practices.
Mothers of 2- to 5-y-old children ( = 278) were recruited mainly on a university campus and completed an online survey to examine associations between maternal stress (Depression, Anxiety, Stress Scale), number of children, marital status, and feeding practices (restriction and pressure to eat; Child Feeding Questionnaire). Relationships were examined through the use of multivariate regression and structural equation modelling.
A mainly married (85%) and Caucasian (73%) sample participated, with most mothers reporting multiple children [2 children (45%) or ≥3 children (24%)]. Marital status was not associated with either feeding practice, i.e., restriction and pressure to eat (< 0.05). In adjusted models, maternal stress (β0.04, SE0.01, 0.003) and number of children (β0.24, SE0.08, 0.003) in the household individually contributed to higher feeding restriction; their interaction resulted in lower feeding restriction (β-0.01, SE0.05, 0.005). In stratified models, maternal stress was associated with restriction in single-child households (β-0.03, SE0.009, 0.002), but not multiple-child households (β-0.004, SE0.005, 0.40).
Number of children had no effect on feeding practices individually, but may contribute to a less restrictive feeding environment. Additional investigation into creating less stressful and more positive feeding environments for all mothers can lead to healthier mothers and families.
家庭环境通过父母及兄弟姐妹对喂养方式的影响,对孩子的健康发展具有重要作用。多子女家庭可能有助于防止不健康的喂养方式,但子女数量增加会导致母亲压力增大。已婚父母家庭可通过分担育儿责任来减轻母亲的压力。
我们旨在评估母亲压力、婚姻状况和子女数量对喂养方式的综合影响。
主要在大学校园招募了2至5岁儿童的母亲(n = 278),她们完成了一项在线调查,以研究母亲压力(抑郁、焦虑、压力量表)、子女数量、婚姻状况和喂养方式(饮食限制和进食压力;儿童喂养问卷)之间的关联。通过多元回归和结构方程模型来检验这些关系。
参与研究的样本主要为已婚(85%)和白人(73%),大多数母亲育有多个子女[2个孩子(45%)或≥3个孩子(24%)]。婚姻状况与任何一种喂养方式均无关联,即饮食限制和进食压力(P < 0.05)。在调整后的模型中,家庭中的母亲压力(β = 0.04,SE = 0.01,P = 0.003)和子女数量(β = 0.24,SE = 0.08,P = 0.003)各自导致更高的饮食限制;它们的交互作用导致更低的饮食限制(β = -0.01,SE = 0.05,P = 0.005)。在分层模型中,母亲压力与独生子女家庭中的饮食限制相关(β = -0.03,SE = 0.009,P = 0.002),但与多子女家庭无关(β = -0.004,SE = 0.005,P = 0.40)。
子女数量单独对喂养方式没有影响,但可能有助于营造限制较少的喂养环境。进一步研究如何为所有母亲创造压力较小且更积极的喂养环境,可使母亲和家庭更健康。