Magaña Sandy, Errisuriz Vanessa L, Yu Amy Pei-Lung, Heydaria Nazanin, Zeng Weiwen, Mirza Mansha, Vanegas Sandra, Brown Stephany, Parra-Medina Deborah, Suarez-Balcazar Yolanda
Texas Center for Disability Studies, Steve Hicks School of Social Work, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX, United States.
Latino Research Institute, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX, United States.
Front Pediatr. 2023 Jul 27;11:1189686. doi: 10.3389/fped.2023.1189686. eCollection 2023.
Maintaining healthy weight is a challenge for all children, and particularly for children with IDD compared to nondisabled children and for Latino children compared to non-Latino White children. Parenting practices related to food intake and physical activity have been found to be important in maintaining children's weight. In this study, we describe the prevalence of overweight and obesity status among Latino children with IDD and their maternal caregivers and determine the relationship between food and physical activity parenting practices and childhood obesity among Latino children with IDD.
We interviewed 94 Latino parent/child dyads and collected information about parenting practices, home environment, and parent and child height and weight using standardized measures. Parent body mass index (BMI) and child BMI percentile were calculated from height and weight.
The combined overweight/obesity status for children in our sample was high (60.3%) compared to national rates among nondisabled Latino children (56%) and non-Latino White children with autism (37%). Contrary to research on nondisabled children, we found that greater parental use of controlling dietary strategies was associated with lower BMI percentile in Latino children with IDD. These findings may be indicative of the fact that children with IDD tend to have unique dietary behaviors that warrant more disability and culturally sensitive strategies.
Our findings suggest that overweight and obesity is especially prevalent for Latino children with IDD and that more research is needed on family factors that promote health in Latino families of children with IDD.
保持健康体重对所有儿童来说都是一项挑战,与非残疾儿童相比,对有智力和发育障碍(IDD)的儿童而言更是如此;与非拉丁裔白人儿童相比,对拉丁裔儿童来说也是如此。已发现与食物摄入和身体活动相关的养育方式在维持儿童体重方面很重要。在本研究中,我们描述了患有IDD的拉丁裔儿童及其母亲照料者中超重和肥胖状况的患病率,并确定了食物和身体活动养育方式与患有IDD的拉丁裔儿童肥胖症之间的关系。
我们采访了94对拉丁裔父母/子女二元组,并使用标准化测量方法收集了有关养育方式、家庭环境以及父母和子女身高体重的信息。根据身高和体重计算父母的体重指数(BMI)和儿童的BMI百分位数。
与非残疾拉丁裔儿童(56%)和患有自闭症的非拉丁裔白人儿童(37%)的全国患病率相比,我们样本中儿童的超重/肥胖合并患病率很高(60.3%)。与对非残疾儿童的研究相反,我们发现,在患有IDD的拉丁裔儿童中,父母更多地使用控制饮食策略与较低的BMI百分位数相关。这些发现可能表明,患有IDD的儿童往往有独特的饮食行为,需要更多针对残疾和文化的敏感策略。
我们的研究结果表明,超重和肥胖在患有IDD的拉丁裔儿童中尤为普遍,需要对促进患有IDD儿童的拉丁裔家庭健康的家庭因素进行更多研究。