Lopez Nanette Virginia, Lai Mark Hc, Yang Chih-Hsiang, Dunton Genevieve Fridlund, Belcher Britni Ryan
Department of Health Sciences, Northern Arizona University, Flagstaff, AZ, United States.
Department of Psychology, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA, United States.
JMIR Form Res. 2022 Aug 10;6(8):e38326. doi: 10.2196/38326.
Childhood obesity prevention interventions routinely focus on changing maternal parenting practices. Failure to assess how fathers' weight-related (ie, diet and physical activity) parenting practices contribute to children's energy balance behaviors limits the understanding of their paternal role within the family. Examining the independent and interacting effects of fathers' and mothers' weight-related parenting practices on children's diet and physical activity addresses this important research gap.
This study used ecological momentary assessment (EMA) to investigate the within-subject and between-subject independent and interactive effects of maternal and paternal encouragement to eat and preparation of fruits and vegetables (F/V) and encouragement of and taking their child to be physically active on their child's self-reported F/V intake and physical activity engagement.
Participants included mother-father-child triads (n=22 triads, n=205-213 prompts/occasions) in the Mothers and Their Children's Health Study and the University of Southern California Fathers Study. Simultaneously, mothers and fathers (ages 44.2 years, SD 5.6, and 45.2 years, SD 8.1, respectively), and their children (age 12.0 years, SD 0.7) completed up to 8 randomly prompted EMA surveys per day on separate smartphones for 7 days. At each prompt, mothers and fathers each reported whether they did the following in the past 2 hours: (1) encouraged their child to eat F/V, (2) prepared F/V for their child, (3) encouraged their child to be physically active, or (4) took their child to be physically active. Children self-reported whether they consumed F/V or were physically active in the past 2 hours.
Results from Bayesian multilevel logistic models (all in log-odd units) indicated that at the within-subject level, greater maternal encouragement (β=2.28, 95% CI 0.08 to 5.68) of eating F/V was associated with greater child report of eating F/V, but paternal encouragement (β=1.50, 95% CI -0.83 to 4.52) showed no effects above and beyond maternal encouragement. Additionally, greater than usual paternal encouragement (β=2.28, 95% CI 0.08 to 5.54) and maternal encouragement (β=2.94, 95% CI 0.36 to 6.69) of physical activity had significant independent effects and were associated with greater child report of physical activity. No other within-subject or between-subject associations nor interactive effects were significant.
Findings from this study suggest that fathers play a role in supporting their children's physical activity but not their intake of F/V. Future EMA studies should recruit larger samples to evaluate the independent and interacting roles of mothers' and fathers' weight-related parenting practices on child's obesogenic behaviors.
儿童肥胖预防干预措施通常侧重于改变母亲的育儿方式。未能评估父亲与体重相关的(即饮食和体育活动方面的)育儿方式如何影响儿童的能量平衡行为,限制了我们对父亲在家庭中角色的理解。研究父亲和母亲与体重相关的育儿方式对孩子饮食和体育活动的独立及交互影响,可填补这一重要研究空白。
本研究采用生态瞬时评估(EMA)来调查母亲和父亲鼓励孩子吃水果和蔬菜(F/V)、准备水果和蔬菜、鼓励孩子进行体育活动以及带孩子进行体育活动对孩子自我报告的F/V摄入量和体育活动参与度的个体内和个体间独立及交互影响。
参与者包括来自“母亲及其子女健康研究”和“南加州大学父亲研究”中的母婴父三人组(n = 22个三人组,n = 205 - 213次提示/场合)。同时,母亲(平均年龄44.2岁,标准差5.6岁)和父亲(平均年龄45.2岁,标准差8.1岁)及其孩子(平均年龄12.0岁,标准差0.7岁)在7天内每天通过各自独立的智能手机完成多达8次随机提示的EMA调查。每次提示时,母亲和父亲分别报告他们在过去2小时内是否做了以下事情:(1)鼓励孩子吃F/V,(2)为孩子准备F/V,(3)鼓励孩子进行体育活动,或(4)带孩子进行体育活动。孩子自我报告他们在过去2小时内是否食用了F/V或进行了体育活动。
贝叶斯多层逻辑模型的结果(均以对数比值单位表示)表明,在个体内水平上,母亲对吃F/V的更多鼓励(β = 2.28,95%置信区间0.08至5.68)与孩子报告吃F/V的比例更高相关,但父亲的鼓励(β = 1.50,95%置信区间 - 0.83至4.52)在母亲鼓励之外没有额外影响。此外,父亲(β = 2.28,95%置信区间0.08至5.54)和母亲(β = 2.94,95%置信区间0.36至6.69)对体育活动大于平常的鼓励具有显著的独立影响,且与孩子报告的体育活动更多相关。没有其他个体内或个体间关联以及交互作用是显著的。
本研究结果表明,父亲在支持孩子体育活动方面发挥作用,但在支持孩子摄入F/V方面没有作用。未来的EMA研究应招募更大的样本,以评估母亲和父亲与体重相关的育儿方式对孩子致肥胖行为的独立及交互作用。