Borloz Sylvie, Bucher Della Torre Sophie, Collet Tinh-Hai, Jotterand Chaparro Corinne
Pediatric Service, Department Woman-Mother-Child, Lausanne University Hospital (CHUV), Lausanne, Switzerland.
Department of Nutrition and Dietetics, Geneva School of Health Sciences, HES-SO University of Applied Sciences and Arts Western Switzerland, Geneva, Switzerland.
JMIR Pediatr Parent. 2021 Nov 15;4(4):e28608. doi: 10.2196/28608.
Both parental education and the food environment influence dietary intake and may therefore contribute to childhood obesity.
We aimed to assess the consumption of ultraprocessed foods (UPFs) in a convenience sample of adolescents with obesity and to determine its association with the food educational style of their parent.
This observational study included 24 participants, 12 adolescents (8 boys and 4 girls) aged from 12 to 14 years and their 12 parents, who were followed in a specialized pediatric obesity clinic in the French-speaking part of Switzerland. The adolescents were asked to take a photograph with a smartphone application of all meals and beverages consumed in their daily routine over 14 consecutive days. They evaluated their parent's food educational style using the Kids' Child Feeding Questionnaire. The parent who was present at the study visits also completed the Feeding Style Questionnaire. A dietitian analyzed the pictures to extract food group portions and to identify UPFs using the NOVA classification. A nonparametric statistical test was used to investigate associations between UPF intake and food educational style.
Overall, the adolescents had unbalanced dietary habits compared to national recommendations. They consumed an insufficient quantity of vegetables, fruits, dairy products, and starchy foods and an excessive amount of meat portions and sugary and fatty products compared to the current Swiss recommendations. Their consumption of UPFs accounted for 20% of their food intake. All adolescents defined their parent as being restrictive in terms of diet, with a mean parental restriction score of 3.3±SD 0.4 (norm median=2.1). No parent reported a permissive food educational style. A higher intake of UPFs was associated with a lower parental restriction score (P=.04).
Despite being followed in a specialized pediatric obesity clinic, this small group of adolescents had an unbalanced diet, which included 20% UPFs. The intake of UPFs was lower in participants whose parent was more restrictive, suggesting the importance of parents as role models and to provide adequate food at home.
ClinicalTrials.gov NCT03241121; https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT03241121.
父母教育程度和食物环境都会影响饮食摄入,因此可能导致儿童肥胖。
我们旨在评估肥胖青少年便利样本中超加工食品(UPF)的消费量,并确定其与父母食物教育方式的关联。
这项观察性研究纳入了24名参与者,12名年龄在12至14岁的青少年(8名男孩和4名女孩)及其12名父母,他们在瑞士法语区的一家专门的儿科肥胖诊所接受随访。要求青少年使用智能手机应用程序拍摄他们在连续14天日常饮食中摄入的所有餐食和饮料的照片。他们使用儿童喂养问卷评估父母的食物教育方式。在研究访视时在场的父母也完成了喂养方式问卷。一名营养师分析照片,以提取食物组份量,并使用NOVA分类法识别UPF。使用非参数统计检验来研究UPF摄入量与食物教育方式之间的关联。
总体而言,与国家建议相比,青少年的饮食习惯不均衡。与当前瑞士的建议相比,他们摄入的蔬菜、水果、乳制品和淀粉类食物不足肉类份量以及含糖和脂肪类产品过量。他们摄入的UPF占食物摄入量的20%。所有青少年都认为他们的父母在饮食方面具有限制性,父母限制得分平均为3.3±标准差0.4(正常中位数=2.1)。没有父母报告放任的食物教育方式。较高的UPF摄入量与较低的父母限制得分相关(P=0.04)。
尽管在一家专门的儿科肥胖诊所接受随访,但这一小群青少年的饮食不均衡,其中UPF占20%。父母限制更强的参与者中UPF摄入量较低,这表明父母作为榜样以及在家中提供合适食物的重要性。
ClinicalTrials.gov NCT03241121;https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT03241121 。