Title of article
Associations between infant temperament and early feeding practices. A cross-sectional study of Australian mother-infant dyads from the NOURISH randomised controlled trial
Author/Authors
Sascha McMeekin، نويسنده , , Elena Jansen، نويسنده , , Kimberley Mallan، نويسنده , , Jan Nicholson، نويسنده , , Anthea Magarey، نويسنده , , Lynne Daniels، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2013
Pages
7
From page
239
To page
245
Abstract
The purpose of this study was to investigate the association between temperament in Australian infants aged 2–7 months and feeding practices of their first-time mothers (n = 698). Associations between feeding practices and beliefs (Infant Feeding Questionnaire) and infant temperament (easy-difficult continuous scale from the Short Temperament Scale for Infants) were tested using linear and binary logistic regression models adjusted for a comprehensive range of covariates. Mothers of infants with a more difficult temperament reported a lower awareness of infant cues, were more likely to use food to calm and reported high concern about overweight and underweight. The covariate maternal depression score largely mirrored these associations. Infant temperament may be an important variable to consider in future research on the prevention of childhood obesity. In practice, mothers of temperamentally difficult infants may need targeted feeding advice to minimise the adoption of undesirable feeding practices.
Keywords
Infant temperament , Obesity , Feeding relationship , Feeding beliefs , Feeding practices
Journal title
Appetite
Serial Year
2013
Journal title
Appetite
Record number
956955
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