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Explaining use of food parenting practices: the importance of predisposing factors and parental cognitions

Authors :
Patricia van Assema
Dorus W. M. Gevers
Stef P. J. Kremers
Nanne K. de Vries
Health promotion
RS: NUTRIM - R1 - Obesity, diabetes and cardiovascular health
RS: NUTRIM - R1 - Metabolic Syndrome
Source :
Public Health Nutrition, 20(13), 2355-2363. Cambridge University Press, Public Health Nutr
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Cambridge University Press (CUP), 2017.

Abstract

ObjectiveThe high energy intake from energy-dense foods among children in developed countries is undesirable. Improving food parenting practices has the potential to lower snack intakes among children. To inform the development of interventions, we aimed to predict food parenting practice patterns around snacking (i.e. ‘high covert control and rewarding’, ‘low covert control and non-rewarding’, ‘high involvement and supportive’ and ‘low involvement and indulgent’).DesignA cross-sectional survey was conducted. To predict the patterns of food parenting practices, multinomial logistic regression analyses were run with 888 parents. Predictors included predisposing factors (i.e. parents’ and children’s demographics and BMI, parents’ personality, general parenting, and parenting practices used by their own parents) and parents’ cognitions (i.e. perceived behaviour of other parents, subjective norms, attitudes, self-efficacy and outcome expectations).SettingThe Netherlands (October–November 2014).SubjectsDutch parents of children aged 4–12 years old.ResultsAfter backward elimination, nineteen factors had a statistically significant contribution to the model (Nagelkerke R2=0·63). Overall, self-efficacy and outcome expectations were among the strongest explanatory factors. Considering the predisposing factors only, the general parenting factor nurturance most strongly predicted the food parenting clusters. Nurturance particularly distinguished highly involved parents from parents employing a pattern of low involvement.ConclusionsParental cognitions and nurturance are important factors to explain the use of food parenting practices around snacking. The results suggest that intervention developers should attempt to increase self-efficacy and educate parents about what constitute effective and ineffective parenting practices. Promoting nurturance might be a prerequisite to achieve prolonged change.

Details

ISSN :
14752727 and 13689800
Volume :
20
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Public Health Nutrition
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f72138104e86afe82fac56376484b883