Kuswara Konsita, Shrewsbury Vanessa A, Macdonald Jacqui A, Chung Alexandra, Hill Briony
The Centre of Research Excellence in Translating Early Prevention of Obesity in Childhood (CRE EPOCH-Translate), Charles Perkins Centre, University of Sydney, Camperdown, New South Wales, Australia.
School of Health Sciences, College of Health, Medicine and Wellbeing, The University of Newcastle, Callaghan, New South Wales, Australia.
Obes Rev. 2025 Feb;26(2):e13853. doi: 10.1111/obr.13853. Epub 2024 Oct 17.
Fathers remain under-represented in early childhood obesity prevention research and interventions, despite growing evidence that paternal biopsychosocial factors and behaviors from pre- and post-conception can influence lifelong offspring health. Informed by a literature review of high-quality evidence, "CO-Parent" (childhood obesity-Parent) is a new conceptual model underpinned by couple interdependence theory and a socioecological framework. Literature was searched for the concepts parental AND weight-related behaviors AND child weight or weight-related behaviors, in databases including MEDLINE, PsycINFO, Global Health, Scopus, and SocINDEX. Prior evidence syntheses were prioritized as source data to inform model development. "CO-Parent" illustrates the interdependent and independent effects of maternal and paternal weight, weight-related behaviors, and well-being, across preconception, pregnancy, postpartum, and the early years on child weight-related behaviors and weight up to age five. The influences of public policy, social, environmental, economic, community, and other complex modifiable mediating factors are included in the model. The "CO-Parent" conceptual model paves the way for a paradigm shift by recognizing fathers as key figures in early childhood obesity prevention initiatives, encouraging them to "share the motherload." It highlights both the independent and interdependent roles fathers play in the epidemiology of obesity starting from preconception. CO-Parent also provides the foundations necessary to guide future theory and research to be more inclusive of fathers to further understanding of the independent and interdependent influences of parents in early childhood obesity prevention.
尽管越来越多的证据表明,父亲的生物心理社会因素以及孕前和孕后的行为会影响后代的终身健康,但在幼儿肥胖预防研究和干预措施中,父亲的参与度仍然较低。基于对高质量证据的文献综述,“共同育儿”(儿童肥胖 - 父母)是一个新的概念模型,以夫妻相互依赖理论和社会生态框架为基础。在包括MEDLINE、PsycINFO、全球健康、Scopus和社会索引在内的数据库中,搜索了有关父母与体重相关行为以及儿童体重或体重相关行为的概念。先前的证据综合被优先作为源数据,为模型开发提供信息。“共同育儿”模型阐述了孕前、孕期、产后以及幼儿期父母双方的体重、体重相关行为和幸福感对儿童体重相关行为和五岁前体重的相互依赖和独立影响。该模型还纳入了公共政策、社会、环境、经济、社区和其他复杂的可改变中介因素的影响。“共同育儿”概念模型通过将父亲视为幼儿肥胖预防倡议中的关键人物,鼓励他们“分担母亲的负担”,为范式转变铺平了道路。它强调了父亲从孕前开始在肥胖流行病学中所起的独立和相互依赖的作用。“共同育儿”模型还为指导未来的理论和研究提供了必要的基础,以便更全面地纳入父亲因素,进一步了解父母在幼儿肥胖预防中的独立和相互依赖影响。