Berge Jerica M, Fertig Angela R, Trofholz Amanda, Neumark-Sztainer Dianne, Rogers Elizabeth, Loth Katie
University of Minnesota Medical School, Department of Family Medicine and Community Health, Minneapolis, MN, United States.
Humphrey School of Public Affairs, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN, United States.
Prev Med Rep. 2020 Jun 15;19:101146. doi: 10.1016/j.pmedr.2020.101146. eCollection 2020 Sep.
Food insecurity is becoming increasingly prevalent, especially for children from diverse households. Food insecurity presents a potentially different context in which parents engage in food-related parenting practices and children engage in eating behaviors. Parents may also experience higher levels of stress and depressed mood in the context of food insecurity. This study aims to examine associations between momentary parental stress and depressed mood, food-related parenting practices, and child eating behaviors within food secure and insecure households. Children ages 5-7 and their families (n = 150) from six racial/ethnic groups (n = 25 each African American, Hispanic, Hmong, Native American, Somali, White) were recruited for this mixed-methods study through primary care clinics in Minneapolis/St. Paul, MN in 2015-2016. High levels of parental stress and depressed mood experienced earlier in the day within food insecure households was associated with using restrictive feeding practices and serving more pre-prepared foods at the evening meal the same night. Parents from food secure households who experienced high levels of stress earlier in the day were more likely to engage in pressure-to-eat feeding practices, serve more fast food, and to have children who engaged in picky eating behaviors at the evening meal the same night. Health care clinicians may want to consider, or continue to, screen parents for food insecurity, stress, and depressed mood during well child visits and discuss the influence these factors may have on every day food-related parenting practices. Additionally, future research should consider using real-time interventions to reduce parental stress to promote healthy food-related parenting practices within food insecure and secure households.
粮食不安全问题日益普遍,尤其是对于来自不同家庭的儿童而言。粮食不安全呈现出一种潜在的不同情境,在此情境中,父母会采取与食物相关的养育方式,孩子会表现出饮食行为。在粮食不安全的情况下,父母可能还会经历更高水平的压力和情绪低落。本研究旨在探讨粮食安全和不安全家庭中父母的瞬间压力与情绪低落、与食物相关的养育方式以及儿童饮食行为之间的关联。通过明尼阿波利斯/圣保罗市(明尼苏达州)的初级保健诊所,招募了来自六个种族/族裔群体(非裔美国人、西班牙裔、苗族、美洲原住民、索马里人、白人各25名)的5至7岁儿童及其家庭(n = 150)参与这项混合方法研究。研究时间为2015年至2016年。粮食不安全家庭中,父母在当天早些时候经历的高水平压力和情绪低落,与当晚使用限制性喂养方式以及晚餐提供更多预制食品有关。当天早些时候经历高水平压力且粮食安全的家庭中的父母,更有可能采取强迫进食的喂养方式,提供更多快餐,并且他们的孩子在当晚晚餐时更有可能表现出挑食行为。医疗保健临床医生可能需要考虑,或者继续在儿童健康检查时筛查父母的粮食不安全、压力和情绪低落情况,并讨论这些因素可能对日常与食物相关的养育方式产生的影响。此外,未来的研究应考虑使用实时干预措施来减轻父母的压力,以在粮食不安全和安全的家庭中促进健康的与食物相关的养育方式。