Integrated Health Policy, Primary and Community Care, Academic Collaborative Center AMPHI, Radboud University Medical Center, ELG 117, P.O. Box 9101, 6500 HB, Nijmegen, the Netherlands.
Trimbos Institute, P.O. Box 725, 3500 AS, Utrecht, the Netherlands.
BMC Public Health. 2022 Feb 18;22(1):348. doi: 10.1186/s12889-022-12742-8.
Review studies increasingly emphasize the importance of the role of parenting in interventions for preventing overweight in children. The aim of this study was to examine typologies regarding how consistently parents apply energy-balance related behavior rules, and the association between these typologies and socio-demographic characteristics, energy balance-related behaviors among school age children, and the prevalence of being overweight.
For this cross-sectional study, we had access to a database managed by a Municipal Health Service Department in the Netherlands. In total, 4,865 parents with children 4-12 years of age participated in this survey and completed a standardized questionnaire. Parents classified their consistency of applying rules as "strict", "indulgent", or "no rules". Typologies were identified using latent class analyses. We used regression analyses to examine how the typologies differed with respect to the covariates socio-demographic characteristics, children's energy balance-related behaviors, and weight status.
We identified four stable, distinct parental typologies with respect to applying dietary and sedentary behavior rules. Overall, we found that parents who apply "overall strict EBRB rules" had the highest level of education and that their children practiced healthier behaviors compared to the children of parents in the other three classes. In addition, we found that parents who apply "indulgent dietary rules and no sedentary rules" had the lowest level of education and the highest percentage of non-Caucasians; in addition, their children 8-12 years of age had the highest likelihood of being overweight compared to children of parents with "no dietary rules".
Parents' consistency in applying rules regarding dietary and sedentary behaviors was associated with parents' level of education and ethnic background, as well as with children's dietary and sedentary behaviors and their likelihood of becoming overweight. Our results may contribute to helping make healthcare professionals aware that children of parents who do not apply sedentary behavior rules are more likely to become overweight, as well as the importance of encouraging parents to apply strict dietary and sedentary behavior rules. These results can serve as a starting point for developing effective strategies to prevent overweight among children.
越来越多的综述研究强调了父母在预防儿童超重干预中的作用。本研究旨在探讨父母在多大程度上一致地应用与能量平衡相关的行为规则,并考察这些类型与社会人口特征、学龄儿童的能量平衡相关行为以及超重流行率之间的关联。
本横断面研究利用了荷兰一个市立卫生服务部门管理的数据库。共有 4865 名 4-12 岁儿童的父母参与了这项调查,并完成了一份标准化问卷。父母将其应用规则的一致性归类为“严格”、“放纵”或“无规则”。使用潜在类别分析确定类型学。我们使用回归分析来研究类型学在社会人口特征、儿童的能量平衡相关行为和体重状况方面的差异。
我们确定了四种关于应用饮食和久坐行为规则的稳定、不同的父母类型学。总体而言,我们发现应用“整体严格 EBRB 规则”的父母受教育程度最高,其子女的行为比其他三类父母的子女更健康。此外,我们发现应用“放纵饮食规则和无久坐规则”的父母受教育程度最低,非白种人比例最高;此外,他们 8-12 岁的孩子超重的可能性最高,而不是父母“无饮食规则”的孩子。
父母在应用饮食和久坐行为规则方面的一致性与父母的教育程度和种族背景有关,也与儿童的饮食和久坐行为以及他们超重的可能性有关。我们的研究结果可能有助于使医疗保健专业人员认识到,不应用久坐行为规则的父母的孩子更容易超重,以及鼓励父母应用严格的饮食和久坐行为规则的重要性。这些结果可以作为制定有效策略以预防儿童超重的起点。