2020
DOI: 10.1161/jaha.119.014520
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Caregiver Influences on Eating Behaviors in Young Children

Abstract: A substantial body of research suggests that efforts to prevent pediatric obesity may benefit from targeting not just what a child eats, but how they eat. Specifically, child obesity prevention should include a component that addresses reasons why children have differing abilities to start and stop eating in response to internal cues of hunger and satiety, a construct known as eating self‐regulation . This review summarizes current knowledge … Show more

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Cited by 108 publications
(65 citation statements)
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“…Controlling feeding practices such as restriction (limiting child access to “unhealthy” foods) and pressure to eat (“clean your plate”) are thought to disrupt children’s innate ability to self-regulate how much they eat and are generally associated with problematic eating behaviors and obesity [ 55 ]. Although restriction and pressure to eat have primarily been studied in relation to child weight and obesity risk [ 56 ], parents may engage in restrictive feeding if the family is experiencing food insecurity as a way to conserve resources [ 57 ]. Similarly, parents may pressure their children to eat available food because they are unsure of when they will have food again and/or so that food is not wasted.…”
Section: Structural Constraints Impact Parent Feeding Practicesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Controlling feeding practices such as restriction (limiting child access to “unhealthy” foods) and pressure to eat (“clean your plate”) are thought to disrupt children’s innate ability to self-regulate how much they eat and are generally associated with problematic eating behaviors and obesity [ 55 ]. Although restriction and pressure to eat have primarily been studied in relation to child weight and obesity risk [ 56 ], parents may engage in restrictive feeding if the family is experiencing food insecurity as a way to conserve resources [ 57 ]. Similarly, parents may pressure their children to eat available food because they are unsure of when they will have food again and/or so that food is not wasted.…”
Section: Structural Constraints Impact Parent Feeding Practicesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…De-implementation has been described as stopping, reducing or replacing the use or delivery of practices or services that are unproven, harmful, ineffective or inappropriate [ 70 ]. Certain educator mealtime nutrition practices used within the ECEC setting have been associated with negative impacts on child eating behaviours, such as the impaired ability to self-regulate food intake [ 71 ] and poor child dietary outcomes [ 72 ]. Such practices include the use of controlling, non-responsive feeding behaviours, including pressuring children to eat [ 72 ], withholding of palatable foods [ 73 ] and using certain foods as a reward for eating or to encourage other desirable behaviours [ 72 ].…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Prior research has attributed variability in childcare settings to the inconsistent associations between childcare exposure and overweight and obesity [ 32 ]. Yet, a majority of interventions directed toward addressing childhood obesity focus on dietary intake of children rather than environmental factors [ 33 ]. In particular, the role of the caregiver in “shaping child eating behaviors associated with healthy body weight outcomes (p 2),” such as eating self-regulation based on recognizing internal hunger and fullness cues in infrequently a focus of intervention or policy [ 33 ].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Yet, a majority of interventions directed toward addressing childhood obesity focus on dietary intake of children rather than environmental factors [ 33 ]. In particular, the role of the caregiver in “shaping child eating behaviors associated with healthy body weight outcomes (p 2),” such as eating self-regulation based on recognizing internal hunger and fullness cues in infrequently a focus of intervention or policy [ 33 ]. A shift toward improving ECET feeding behaviors may help to fill the need to understand, “how childcare environments can be optimized to mitigate the risk of childhood obesity (p 10).” [ 32 ] The TT-R has potential to contribute to that line of research (and/or internal assessment) within childcare environments by identifying unsupportive practices to eliminate and supportive practices to amplify across different ECE meal occasions.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%