1Department of Family Medicine and Community Health,University of Minnesota,717 Delaware Street SE #420,Minneapolis,MN 55414,USA.
2Division of Epidemiology and Community Health,School of Public Health,University of Minnesota,Minneapolis,MN,USA.
Public Health Nutr. 2019 May;22(7):1269-1280. doi: 10.1017/S1368980018003920. Epub 2019 Feb 8.
The current mixed-methods study explored qualitative accounts of prior childhood experiences and current contextual factors around family meals across three quantitatively informed categories of family meal frequency patterns from adolescence to parenthood: (i) 'maintainers' of family meals across generations; (ii) 'starters' of family meals in the next generation; and (iii) 'inconsistent' family meal patterns across generations.
Quantitative survey data collected as part of the first (1998-1999) and fourth (2015-2016) waves of the longitudinal Project EAT (Eating and Activity in Adolescents and Young Adults) study and qualitative interviews conducted with a subset (n 40) of Project EAT parent participants in 2016-2017.
Surveys were completed in school (Wave 1) and online (Wave 4); qualitative interviews were completed in-person or over the telephone.ParticipantsParents of children of pre-school age (n 40) who had also completed Project EAT surveys at Wave 1 and Wave 4.
Findings revealed salient variation within each overarching theme around family meal influences ('early childhood experiences', 'influence of partner', 'household skills' and 'family priorities') across the three intergenerational family meal patterns, in which 'maintainers' had numerous influences that supported the practice of family meals; 'starters' experienced some supports and some challenges; and 'inconsistents' experienced many barriers to making family meals a regular practice.
Family meal interventions should address differences in cooking and planning skills, aim to reach all adults in the home, and seek to help parents who did not eat family meals as a child develop an understanding of how and why they might start this tradition with their family.
本混合方法研究通过青少年到为人父母阶段的三种定量告知的家庭用餐频率模式,探索了先前儿童经历和当前家庭用餐环境因素的定性描述:(i)跨代维持家庭用餐的人;(ii)下一代开始家庭用餐的人;以及(iii)跨代家庭用餐模式不一致的人。
定量调查数据是作为纵向 EAT 研究(青少年和年轻人的饮食和活动)的第一(1998-1999 年)和第四(2015-2016 年)波的一部分收集的,以及 2016-2017 年对 EAT 项目的父母参与者进行的小组(n=40)定性访谈。
调查在学校(第 1 波)和网上(第 4 波)完成;定性访谈在个人或电话中完成。
有学龄前儿童的父母(n=40),他们还完成了第 1 波和第 4 波的 EAT 调查。
研究结果揭示了在三种跨代家庭用餐模式中,围绕家庭用餐影响的每个总体主题内的显著差异(“儿童早期经历”、“伴侣的影响”、“家庭技能”和“家庭优先事项”),其中“维持者”有许多支持家庭用餐实践的影响因素;“起始者”经历了一些支持和一些挑战;而“不一致者”则面临许多障碍,难以定期进行家庭用餐。
家庭用餐干预措施应针对烹饪和计划技能的差异,旨在覆盖家庭中的所有成年人,并努力帮助那些在童年时不与家人一起用餐的父母了解他们如何以及为何可能开始这一传统。