Ma Yining, Bailey-Davis Lisa, Fisher Zachary F, Moore Amy M, Savage Jennifer S
Center for Childhood Obesity Research, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park.
Department of Nutritional Sciences, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park.
JAMA Netw Open. 2025 Aug 1;8(8):e2528689. doi: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2025.28689.
Parents influence young children's diet, sleep, and physical activity behaviors. Pediatric primary care practitioners (PCPs) are uniquely positioned to identify obesogenic behaviors from infancy, yet few screening tools assess these behaviors in clinical settings.
To explore the association between parent-reported obesogenic behaviors and infant weight outcomes.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: This cross-sectional study is a secondary analysis of data from the Women, Infants, and Children Enhancements to Early Healthy Lifestyles for Baby (WEE Baby) Care study. Participants were recruited from the Geisinger Health System in northeastern Pennsylvania between July 6, 2016, and April 30, 2018. Mothers aged 18 years or older were eligible if their infant was enrolled in the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children and who completed the Early Healthy Lifestyles (EHL) screening tool at infant age 2 months and had available infant growth data at 6 months. The analysis was completed on June 8, 2025.
The 15-item parent-reported EHL tool assessing infant diet, mothers' feeding practices, infant sleep, interactive play, and appetitive traits.
Infant weight and length were measured at well-child visits. The primary outcomes were body mass index (BMI) and weight-for-length (WFL) z scores at infant age 6 months.
Among 143 mother-infant dyads (median [IQR] maternal age, 26.5 [23.0-31.1] years; infant mean [SD] gestational age, 39.5 [1.2] weeks; 77 boys [53.8%]), the EHL tool identified 9 behaviors associated with higher BMI and WFL z scores at infant age 6 months, including developmentally inappropriate bottle size, nighttime feeding, putting the infants to bed after 8:00 pm, frequent night wakes, television on in the room where the infant sleeps, putting the infant to bed already asleep instead of drowsy but awake, limited active play or tummy time, using a cell phone or television while playing, and mothers' perception of the infant always being hungry. Higher composite scores were significantly associated with higher BMI z score (β = 0.22; 95% CI, 0.10-0.34) and WFL z score (β = 0.21; 95% CI, 0.09-0.33) at 6 months.
These findings show that the EHL screening tool, which identifies modifiable obesogenic behaviors, is associated with early-life weight outcomes. Validating this tool requires testing in clinical and community settings for early childhood obesity prevention.
父母会影响幼儿的饮食、睡眠和身体活动行为。儿科初级保健从业者(PCP)在识别婴儿期的致肥胖行为方面具有独特优势,但很少有筛查工具能在临床环境中评估这些行为。
探讨父母报告的致肥胖行为与婴儿体重结果之间的关联。
设计、设置和参与者:这项横断面研究是对妇女、婴儿和儿童早期健康生活方式强化护理(WEE Baby)研究数据的二次分析。参与者于2016年7月6日至2018年4月30日期间从宾夕法尼亚州东北部的盖辛格健康系统招募。年龄在18岁及以上的母亲,如果其婴儿参加了妇女、婴儿和儿童特别补充营养计划,并且在婴儿2个月大时完成了早期健康生活方式(EHL)筛查工具,且在6个月时有可用的婴儿生长数据,则符合条件。分析于2025年6月8日完成。
15项由父母报告的EHL工具,用于评估婴儿饮食、母亲的喂养方式、婴儿睡眠、互动游戏和食欲特征。
在儿童健康检查时测量婴儿的体重和身长。主要结局是婴儿6个月大时的体重指数(BMI)和身长体重比(WFL)z评分。
在143对母婴二元组中(母亲年龄中位数[四分位间距]为26.5[23.0 - 31.1]岁;婴儿平均[标准差]胎龄为39.5[1.2]周;77名男孩[53.8%]),EHL工具识别出9种与婴儿6个月大时较高的BMI和WFL z评分相关的行为,包括奶瓶尺寸发育不当、夜间喂养、晚上8点后让婴儿上床睡觉、频繁夜间醒来、婴儿睡觉房间开着电视、让婴儿已睡着而不是昏昏欲睡但清醒时上床睡觉、有限的积极游戏或俯卧时间、玩耍时使用手机或电视,以及母亲认为婴儿总是饥饿。较高的综合评分与6个月时较高的BMI z评分(β = 0.22;95%置信区间,0.10 - 0.34)和WFL z评分(β = 0.21;95%置信区间,0.09 - 0.33)显著相关。
这些发现表明,识别可改变的致肥胖行为的EHL筛查工具与早期体重结果相关。验证该工具需要在临床和社区环境中进行测试,以预防儿童早期肥胖。