School of Health in Social Science, University of Edinburgh, Teviot Place, EH8 9AG, Edinburgh, UK.
School of Health in Social Science, University of Edinburgh, Teviot Place, EH8 9AG, Edinburgh, UK.
Appetite. 2022 Jan 1;168:105755. doi: 10.1016/j.appet.2021.105755. Epub 2021 Oct 11.
Parental restriction of food intake has been associated with heightened eating disorder psychopathology in some longitudinal research. Yet, relatively little is known about the determinants of restrictive feeding practices. This cross-sectional study explored the association between parents' anti-fat attitudes and their use of restrictive feeding practices in a mixed British (41.10% England, 39.90% Scotland, 4.20% Other) and Irish (14.80%) sample. Parents and caregivers (N = 472; 94.10% female; 70.90% university level education) of children between the ages of 4-8 (48.20% female; 91.10% rated as "normal weight" by their parents) completed self-report questionnaires assessing their anti-fat attitudes (dislike, fear, and blame subscales), use of restrictive feeding practices (for weight control, health purposes, and covert restriction), and how influential their child's body-weight and -shape is for their perception of themselves as parents. Overall, our hypothesis that parental anti-fat attitudes would be significantly associated with restrictive feeding practices was supported. Anti-fat attitudes related to disliking higher body-weight people and blaming parents for their child's weight were significant predictors of all forms of restrictive feeding (all ps < .05). However, anti-fat attitudes related to fearing being a higher body-weight were not significant predictors of restrictive feeding for the purposes of health nor for covert restriction (ps > .05). Additionally, our hypothesis that the associations between anti-fat attitudes and restrictive feeding practices would be stronger for parents for whom their child's body-weight and -shape more strongly influenced how they judged themselves as parents was not supported (the interaction term was not significant in two out of three analyses). Future research is needed to investigate these associations across time and in samples of higher body-weight children.
父母限制孩子的食物摄入量与一些纵向研究中饮食障碍心理病理学的加剧有关。然而,对于限制喂养行为的决定因素,我们知之甚少。这项横断面研究探讨了父母的反脂肪态度与他们在混合的英国(41.10%英格兰,39.90%苏格兰,4.20%其他)和爱尔兰(14.80%)样本中使用限制喂养行为之间的关系。年龄在 4-8 岁之间的儿童的父母和照顾者(N=472;94.10%为女性;70.90%受过大学教育)完成了自我报告问卷,评估他们的反脂肪态度(不喜欢、恐惧和责备分量表)、使用限制喂养行为(用于控制体重、健康目的和隐蔽限制)以及孩子的体重和体型对他们作为父母的自我认知的影响程度。总的来说,我们的假设是父母的反脂肪态度与限制喂养行为显著相关,这一假设得到了支持。反脂肪态度与不喜欢体重较高的人以及将孩子的体重归咎于父母有关,这是所有形式的限制喂养行为的重要预测因素(所有 p 值均<.05)。然而,反脂肪态度与害怕自己体重较高与健康目的或隐蔽限制的限制喂养行为无关(p 值>.05)。此外,我们的假设是,父母对孩子的体重和体型的看法对他们作为父母的自我认知的影响越大,反脂肪态度与限制喂养行为之间的关联就越强,但这一假设在三项分析中的两项中并不成立(交互项不显著)。未来的研究需要在时间和更高体重儿童的样本中调查这些关联。