Department of Nutrition and Dietetics, Faculty of Medical and Health Sciences, University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand.
Social and Community Health, School of Population Health, University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand.
Appetite. 2024 Nov 1;202:107619. doi: 10.1016/j.appet.2024.107619. Epub 2024 Aug 2.
Food neophobia (FN) reduces nutritional adequacy and variety which poses a significant concern for children's health and well-being We described the FN scores among 8-year-olds and examined its associations with nutrition-related behaviors at 45 months within the Growing Up in New Zealand cohort (n = 4621). FN was estimated using the Food Neophobia Scale (FNS). Mean FNS scores between variable categories were compared using t-tests for independent samples and ANOVA. Associations between FNS scores at 8 years and nutrition-related behaviors at 45-months were examined using multivariate linear regression. The mean (standard deviation) FN score was 46.2 (15.2) with statistically significant differences by sex (boys = 47.6 (15.7), girls = 43.8 (14.2), p=<0.001). For all children, in models adjusted by breastfeeding duration and sociodemographic characteristics: children who sometimes and never/almost never ate the same foods as their parents, scored, on average, 5.8 and 11 points higher in the FNS (versus those who did always/almost always); children who occasionally/never found mealtimes enjoyable scored on average 3.6 points lower in the FNS (versus mostly/quite often); children who always/almost always had the television on during mealtimes scored on average 2.7 higher in the FNS (versus never/almost never). In comparison to children who mostly/quite often had time to talk to others during mealtimes, those who never/occasionally did it scored on average higher points in the FNS overall (1.46 points higher) and within girls (1.73 points higher). These findings support the eating behavior statements in the National Children's Food and Nutrition Guidelines, which emphasize early exposure to food variety, limiting mealtime distractions, and acknowledge that parental role modeling shapes children's nutrition-related behaviors. Early adoption of preventative interventions for reducing FN in early and middle childhood are needed.
食物恐惧(FN)会降低营养的充足性和多样性,这对儿童的健康和福祉构成了重大关注。我们描述了 8 岁儿童的 FN 评分,并在新西兰成长队列(n=4621)中,在 45 个月时检查了其与营养相关行为的相关性。FN 使用食物恐惧量表(FNS)进行估计。使用独立样本 t 检验比较变量类别之间的平均 FNS 评分和方差分析。使用多元线性回归检查 8 岁时的 FNS 评分与 45 个月时的营养相关行为之间的相关性。FN 得分的平均值(标准差)为 46.2(15.2),性别之间存在统计学差异(男孩为 47.6(15.7),女孩为 43.8(14.2),p<0.001)。对于所有儿童,在调整母乳喂养持续时间和社会人口特征的模型中:有时和从不/几乎从不与父母吃相同食物的儿童,FNS 平均得分高 5.8 和 11 分(与始终/几乎始终这样做的儿童相比);偶尔/从不觉得用餐时间愉快的儿童,FNS 平均得分低 3.6 分(与大部分/相当经常相比);总是/几乎总是在吃饭时开着电视的儿童,FNS 平均得分高 2.7 分(与从不/几乎从不相比)。与大多数/相当经常在吃饭时间有时间与他人交谈的儿童相比,那些从未/偶尔这样做的儿童,FNS 平均得分总体上(高 1.46 分)和女孩(高 1.73 分)较高。这些发现支持国家儿童食品和营养指南中的饮食行为声明,该声明强调早期接触食物多样性,限制用餐时间的干扰,并承认父母的榜样塑造了儿童的营养相关行为。需要在幼儿和中期儿童中尽早采取预防干预措施来减少 FN。