2004
DOI: 10.1542/peds.2003-1075-l
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Parental Feeding Attitudes and Styles and Child Body Mass Index: Prospective Analysis of a Gene-Environment Interaction

Abstract: ABSTRACT.Background. Parental feeding styles were linked to child weight in cross-sectional studies, which were unable to test the direction of effect. Prospective studies can best establish causal relationships among such variables.Objective. We tested the 2-year stability of parental feeding attitudes and styles and investigated whether these variables predict child body mass index (BMI) z scores 2 years later. We evaluated whether these associations were dependent on children's predisposition to obesity.Met… Show more

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Cited by 378 publications
(419 citation statements)
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References 27 publications
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“…Restriction was associated with child weight in BAC families only. In line with previous research, 3,5 BAC parents used more restriction with heavier children. Controlling feeding may have been a parental response to their children's weight or may have led to the development of children's weight problems.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 89%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Restriction was associated with child weight in BAC families only. In line with previous research, 3,5 BAC parents used more restriction with heavier children. Controlling feeding may have been a parental response to their children's weight or may have led to the development of children's weight problems.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 89%
“…While moderate guidance and control of the child's food environment is necessary to facilitate healthy weight and eating, excessive control may be detrimental to healthy weight and eating outcomes. Restriction has also been associated with the development of obesigenic child eating behaviours [3][4][5] and pressure is associated with subsequent lower consumption and preference for pressured foods. 6 Monitoring, described as parents' awareness of their child's intake of foods high in salt, sugar and fat, seems to be effective in regulating children's intake.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Covert restriction, however, appears not to be related with such effects (Ogden, Reynolds, & Smith, 2006). The extent to which parents overtly restrict food may be related to the perceived weight status of the child, with parents using more restriction with infants who have a higher BMI (at 6-12 months; Brown & Lee, 2011) or those perceived to be at risk of becoming obese (Faith et al, 2004). However, while greater restriction of food during infancy predicts lower child weight at age 2 (Farrow & Blissett, 2008), by 5 years of age the use of earlier maternal restriction predicts greater child weight scores (Farrow, 2011;but see also Campbell et al, 2010).…”
Section: Coercive Feeding Practicesmentioning
confidence: 94%
“…Further details of parental characteristics and study design were reported previously. [20][21][22][23][24] The present analyses were based on a sub-sample of this cohort for whom food records were available for the years of interest. Weighed 3-day food records Each year, at 72 weeks of each child's birthday, the primary caretaker of each child completed 3-day weighed food records (2 weekdays, 1 weekend day).…”
Section: Subjectsmentioning
confidence: 99%