Publications by authors named "Caroline B Lucas"

This study aimed to assess how parent stress and COVID-19 impact on the family are associated with parental pressure to eat during the COVID-19 pandemic. Parents of healthy preschool-aged children completed measures including pressure to eat (Child Feeding Questionnaire), parent perception of their stress (Perceived Stress Scale), household food insecurity (Hunger Vital Sign) and effects of COVID-19 on families (COVID-19 Exposure and Family Impact). Children (N = 228) were racially, ethnically, and socioeconomically diverse (34 % Black, 15 % Hispanic, and 29 % with household income <$20,000).

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Article Synopsis
  • The study highlights the unknown long-term effects of hypertension in youth, despite its rising rates and high adult cardiovascular mortality.
  • The Study of the Epidemiology of Pediatric Hypertension (SUPERHERO) aims to address past research limitations by gathering a large, diverse registry of youth with hypertension through standardized electronic health records.
  • SUPERHERO focuses on improving cardiovascular outcomes and developing top-notch biomedical informatics methods for managing youth hypertension, with inclusion criteria for patients under 19 with specific hypertension disorders.
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Controlling feeding practices, such as pressure to eat, are associated with a child's disinhibited eating and extremes in bodyweight. We aimed to explore which factors are associated with parent dyads' pressuring feeding practices, including how mothers and fathers perceive the sharing of household tasks such as mealtime and child feeding responsibilities. In this cross-sectional study, parent dyads (mother and father) of healthy preschool-aged children completed an identical questionnaire consisting of measures of picky eating (food fussiness subscale of Child Eating Behavior Questionnaire), parental concern for undereating, and pressure to eat (Child Feeding Questionnaire).

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Background: Household food insecurity (HFI) is associated with poor general and mental health. Prior studies assessed parent and child mental health separately and did not assess other social risks.

Objective: To assess the relationship between HFI and both parental and child mental health.

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