Leibniz Institute for Prevention Research and Epidemiology - BIPS, Bremen, Germany.
Department of Public Health, Ghent University, Ghent, Belgium.
Int J Behav Nutr Phys Act. 2020 Mar 5;17(1):32. doi: 10.1186/s12966-020-00939-2.
There has been an increase in children growing up in non-traditional families, such as single-parent and blended families. Children from such families have a higher prevalence of obesity and poorer health outcomes, but research on the relationship with obesogenic behaviours is limited.
Therefore, the aim of this study was to investigate whether there are associations between family structures and obesogenic behaviours and related family rules in European children and adolescents.
The sample included 7664 children (mean age ± SD: 10.9 ± 2.9) from 4923 families who were participants of the multi-centre I.Family study (2013/2014) conducted in 8 European countries. Family structure was assessed by a detailed interview on kinship and household. Obesogenic behaviours (screen time, sleep duration, consumption of sugar-sweetened beverages (SSBs)) and family rules (rules for computer and television, bedtime routine, availability of SSBs during meals) were determined by standardized questionnaires. Multilevel mixed-effects linear and logistic regression models were used to model the associations of family structure with obesogenic behaviours and family rules. Sex, age, parental education level, number of children and adults in the household and BMI z-score were covariates in the models. Two-parent biological families were set as the reference category.
Children from single-parent families were less likely to have family rules regarding screen time (OR: 0.62, 95% CI: 0.40-0.94, p = 0.026) with higher reported hours of screen time per week (β = 2.70 h/week, 95% CI: 1.39-4.00, p < 0.001). The frequency of weekly SSB consumption differed by family structure in a sex-specific manner: girls from single-parent (β = 3.19 frequency/week, 95% CI: 0.91-5.47, p = 0.006) and boys from blended/adoptive families (β = 3.01 frequency/week, 95% CI: 0.99-5.03, p = 0.004) consumed more SSBs. Sleep duration, bedtime routines and availability of SSBs during meals did not differ between children from these family structures. Parental education did not modify any of these associations.
Parents in non-traditional family structures appear to experience more difficulties in restricting screen time and the intake of SSBs in their children than parents in traditional two-parent family structures. Our findings therefore suggest that additional support and effective strategies for parents in non-traditional families may help to reduce obesogenic behaviours in children from such family types.
越来越多的儿童成长于非传统家庭,如单亲家庭和混合家庭。这些家庭的儿童肥胖率和健康状况较差,但关于肥胖相关行为的研究有限。
因此,本研究旨在调查欧洲儿童和青少年的家庭结构与肥胖相关行为及其相关家庭规则之间是否存在关联。
该研究的样本包括来自 8 个欧洲国家的 4923 个家庭的 7664 名儿童(平均年龄±标准差:10.9±2.9 岁),这些儿童均为多中心 I.Family 研究(2013/2014 年)的参与者。家庭结构通过详细的亲属和家庭访谈进行评估。肥胖相关行为(屏幕时间、睡眠时间、含糖饮料(SSB)的摄入)和家庭规则(计算机和电视规则、睡前常规、用餐时 SSB 的供应)通过标准化问卷确定。使用多级混合效应线性和逻辑回归模型来模拟家庭结构与肥胖相关行为和家庭规则之间的关联。模型中的协变量包括性别、年龄、父母教育程度、家庭中的儿童和成年人数量以及 BMI z 评分。双亲生物家庭被设定为参考类别。
单亲家庭的儿童更有可能没有关于屏幕时间的家庭规则(OR:0.62,95%CI:0.40-0.94,p=0.026),每周报告的屏幕时间也更长(β:2.70 小时/周,95%CI:1.39-4.00,p<0.001)。SSB 的每周消费频率因家庭结构而异,且存在性别差异:单亲家庭的女孩(β:3.19 次/周,95%CI:0.91-5.47,p=0.006)和混合/收养家庭的男孩(β:3.01 次/周,95%CI:0.99-5.03,p=0.004)每周消耗的 SSB 更多。来自这些家庭结构的儿童的睡眠时间、睡前常规和用餐时 SSB 的供应没有差异。父母的教育程度并没有改变这些关联中的任何一个。
与传统的双亲家庭结构相比,非传统家庭结构中的父母似乎在限制儿童的屏幕时间和 SSB 摄入方面遇到更多困难。因此,我们的研究结果表明,为非传统家庭提供额外的支持和有效的策略可能有助于减少此类家庭类型儿童的肥胖相关行为。