4.4 Article

Home Food Environment in Relation to Children's Diet Quality and Weight Status

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE ACADEMY OF NUTRITION AND DIETETICS
Volume 114, Issue 10, Pages 1569-1579

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.jand.2014.05.015

Keywords

Childhood obesity; Home food availability; Dietary quality; Parenting; Food rules

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health/National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences [R01 ES014240]
  2. US Department of Agriculture [2006-04623]

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The objective of this cohort study was to explore relationships among the home food environment (HFE), child/parent characteristics, diet quality, and measured weight status among 699 child-parent pairs from King County, WA, and San Diego County, CA. HFE variables included parenting style/feeding practices, food rules, frequency of eating out, home food availability, and parents' perceptions of food costs. Child dietary intake was measured by 3-day recall and diet quality indicators included fruits and vegetables, sweet/savory snacks, high-calorie beverages, and Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension (DASH) score. Individual linear regression models were run in which child BMI z score and child diet quality indicators were dependent variables and HFE variables and child/parent characteristics were independent variables of interest. Fruit and vegetable consumption was associated with parental encouragement/modeling (beta=.68, P<0.001) and unhealthful food availability (-0.27, P<0.05); DASH score with food availability (healthful: 1.3, P<0.01; unhealthful: 2.25, P<0.001), food rules (0.45, P<0.01), and permissive feeding style (-1.04, P<0.05): high-calorie beverages with permissive feeding style (0.14, P<0.01) and unhealthful food availability (0.21, P<0.001); and sweet/savory snacks with healthful food availability (0.26, P<0.05; unexpectedly positive). Children's BMI z score was positively associated with parent's use of food restriction (0.21, P<0.001), permissive feeding style (0.16, P<0.05), and concern for healthy food costs (0.10, P<0.01), but negatively with verbal encouragement/modeling (-0.17, P<0.05), and pressure to eat (-0.34, P<0.001). Various HFE factors associated with parenting around eating and food availability are related to child diet quality and weight status. These factors should be considered when designing interventions for improving child health.

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