Child food portion sizes in the home environment: how do parents decide?

Proc Nutr Soc

Nutrition Innovation Centre for Food and Health (NICHE), School of Biomedical Sciences, Ulster University, Coleraine, Northern Ireland, UK.

Published: September 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study highlights how larger portion sizes contribute to childhood obesity, yet little is known about how parents decide on portion sizes at home.
  • Parents often base their decisions on their own portion sizes and their understanding of their child's appetite, which can lead to unconscious habits.
  • To help ensure appropriate portion sizes, strategies such as modeling behavior, using unit packaging, and encouraging children's self-regulation are suggested, while a lack of knowledge about portion size guidelines remains a significant barrier.

Article Abstract

The consumption of larger portion sizes (PS) of food has been implicated in the increased prevalence of childhood obesity. The home is usually the first place children learn about food, however, little is known about how parents determine child PS in the home environment. This narrative review aimed to explore parental beliefs, decisions, strategies and barriers to the provision of appropriate food PS for children in the home environment. Results indicate that parental decisions on child food PS are based on the amounts they serve themselves, personal intuition and knowledge of child appetite. Owing to the habitual nature of food provision, parental decisions on child PS may be taken without conscious thought and/or could be part of a complex decision-making process influenced by several interlinked factors, including parental childhood mealtime experiences, other family members and child weight status. Strategies to determine child-appropriate PS include modelling the desired PS behaviour, use of unit-based food packaging and PS estimation aids, and providing the child with a degree of autonomy to rely on their own appetite cues. A lack of knowledge/awareness of PS guidance is a key barrier identified by parents to the provision of age-appropriate PS, warranting the inclusion of salient child-appropriate PS guidance within national dietary recommendations. Further home-based interventions to improve the provision of appropriate child PS are required, leveraged on parental strategies already in use, as outlined in this review.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0029665123000071DOI Listing

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