Parent feeding behavior and child appetite: associations depend on feeding style.

Int J Eat Disord

Division of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry, Department of Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland.

Published: November 2014

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to explore how different parental feeding behaviors influence preschoolers' eating traits and weight trajectories.
  • Researchers surveyed 439 parents of UK children aged 3-5 on various styles of feeding, including authoritarian and authoritative methods, and measured children’s food responsiveness and BMI.
  • Results indicated that specific parental feeding styles, like Restriction and Pressuring, were strongly linked to children's eating traits, with implications for understanding how these behaviors may affect the development of eating issues in kids.

Article Abstract

Objective: Eating behavior traits measured in early life predict eating behavior and weight trajectories later in development, and may be associated with certain parental feeding behaviors. Our goal was to investigate the relationship between a range of feeding behaviors, and preschoolers' appetitive traits.

Method: Four hundred thirty-nine parents of UK 3-5 year olds completed scales measuring authoritarian vs. authoritative forms of limiting (Restriction vs. Monitoring) and promoting (Pressuring vs. Prompting) intake, as well as Emotional and Instrumental Feeding. Parents also completed scales measuring child Food responsiveness and Satiety responsiveness. Child BMI z-scores were calculated based on measured heights and weights.

Results: Parental Restriction was significantly associated with greater child Food responsiveness (p < .001), but parental Monitoring was not. Parental Pressuring was significantly associated with greater child Satiety responsiveness (p < .001), while parental Prompting was not. Parental Instrumental and Emotional feeding were both associated with greater child Food responsiveness (p < .001). All relationships were independent of child BMI z-score.

Discussion: Prospective data are needed to determine whether the parent-child feeding relationships identified here promote, or protect against, the development of eating pathology in children. However, our results suggest that cross-sectional associations depend on the style (e.g., authoritarian vs. authoritative), as well as the type of feeding behavior measured.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4211951PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/eat.22324DOI Listing

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