4.6 Article

Intergeneration transfer of diet patterns? Parental self-report of diet and their report of their young adult children with ASD

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PLOS ONE
卷 17, 期 2, 页码 -

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PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0263445

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  1. University of Virginia Supporting Transformative Autism Research (STAR) Initiative

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Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) affects a significant number of American children, leading to neophobia, food hypersensitivity, and rigid food preferences, which contribute to a higher risk of diet-related chronic diseases. This exploratory pilot study examined parental perception of food intake for themselves and their young adult children with ASD. The findings suggest a potential intergenerational transfer of dietary intake patterns, highlighting the importance of improving parental diet to enhance diet quality in young adults with ASD and prevent diet-related chronic diseases in individuals with ASD.
Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) affects two percent of American children and often results in neophobia, hypersensitivity to foods, and firmly set food preferences, leading to higher proportions of individuals suffering from diet-related chronic diseases. Our objective was to conduct an explorative pilot study to examine parents' perception of food intake for themselves and their young adult children with ASD. We employed comparative analysis to discover potential pathways to improve diet quality and lower the risk for chronic disease in individuals with ASD. Data from an online survey in n = 493 parent-child dyads on parentally reported intake patterns, food group, and food consumption was analyzed using kappa statistics to determine the level of agreement between reported parental and child intake patterns, body weight status and activity level. Average age was 48 years for parents and 22 years for their children, respectively. Parent-child agreement for obesity was high. We found very strong agreement between the reported diet variety (kappa = 0.82) and changing daily intake (kappa = 0.63) and strong agreement for some vegetable intake patterns (kappa = 0.61 for orange, white, and starchy vegetables) but not in meat intake (no agreement). Results of this study indicate evidence for perceived intergenerational transfer of dietary intake patterns, which may offer effective approaches to change parental diet, to subsequently improve diet quality in young adults with ASD and prevent diet-related chronic diseases in individuals with ASD.

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