Title of article
Predictors of maternal child-feeding style: maternal and child characteristics
Author/Authors
Lori A. Francis، نويسنده , , Scott M. Hofer، نويسنده , , Leann L. Birch، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
دوماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2001
Pages
13
From page
231
To page
243
Abstract
We investigated relationships among maternal and child characteristics, and two aspects of maternal child-feeding styles that may place daughters at risk for developing problems with energy balance. Participants included 104 overweight (BMI≥25) and 92 non-overweight (BMI<25) mothers and their 5-year-old, non-Hispanic, White daughters. Child-feeding styles included (a) restriction of daughtersʹ intake of energy-dense snack food, and (b) pressure to eat more food. Predictors of child-feeding styles included measures of (1) maternal investment in weight and eating issues, including dietary restraint and weight concern, (2) child adiposity, (3) maternal perceptions of the child as underweight or overweight, and (4) maternal concern for child weight. Mothers reported using more restrictive feeding practices when they were invested in weight and eating issues, when they perceived daughters as overweight, when they were concerned about daughtersʹ weight, and when daughters were heavier. Mothers reported using more pressure in child feeding when daughters were thinner, and when mothers perceived daughters as underweight. Further analyses examined whether relationships among child-feeding styles were different for overweight and non-overweight mothers. Overweight mothersʹ child-feeding styles appeared to be influenced by observable child weight characteristics, concerns for the childʹs weight status, and mothersʹ own history of overweight. Non-overweight mothersʹ child-feeding styles appeared to be influenced by distorted perceptions of and concerns for children, as well as distorted self-perceptions.
Journal title
Appetite
Serial Year
2001
Journal title
Appetite
Record number
954503
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