| Literature DB >> 28153053 |
Kamila Davidson1, Helen Vidgen2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Despite the high prevalence of childhood overweight and obesity enrolment to weight management programs remains difficult, time consuming, costly and has limited effectiveness. The aim of this paper was to explore parents' perspectives on factors that influence their decision to enrol in a program to address their child's weight.Entities:
Keywords: Child; Obesity; Overweight; Program; Recruitment
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28153053 PMCID: PMC5290615 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-017-4085-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Participant characteristics (n = 21)
| Characteristics | Number ( |
|---|---|
| Parent gender | |
| Male | 1 |
| Female | 20 |
| Child’s gender | |
| Male | 9 |
| Female | 12 |
| Area | |
| Urban | 10 |
| Regional | 11 |
| Child’s age (in years) | |
| 5 – 6 | 4 |
| 7 – 8 | 4 |
| 9 – 10 | 9 |
| 11 – <12 | 4 |
| Sessions completed | |
| 0 | 2 |
| 1–5 | 12 |
| 6–10 | 7 |
Fig. 1The alignment of the interview questions with constructs of the TPB
Theme 1: Comments regarding motivation to enrol in the program
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| P7: ‘I have been watching it [weight] for a while, since 2010’ |
| P8: ‘I watched the way he looked for a while’ |
| P10: ‘She’s always been bigger then peers the same age…I’ve been keeping an eye on weight progression and in the last couple of years it increased a lot….she looked chubby’ |
| P12: ‘She’s been overweight since 2–3 years old… she’s always has been at the higher range of overweight and lower range of obese’ |
| P15: ‘It’s always been on the higher end [BMI]’ |
| P16: ‘I wasn’t surprised that he’s overweight because the weight and height has been higher for a while now for age…I got worried when it was flagged by the paediatrician’ |
| P17: ‘She (daughter) is getting older and weight is getting higher and higher’ |
| P18: ‘I was suspected it (child’s overweight) for a while but didn’t want to believe it’ |
| P19: ‘I was concerned for at least 2 years’ |
| P20: ‘I knew for a long time, I was aware since the beginning’ |
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| P1: ‘Weighing [on scales] is not something we do regularly at home…just by looking at her you can see that she is overweight…has a stomach like a pregnant woman’ |
| P8: ‘He’s bigger than average, in comparison to other kids at school…I didn’t put him on scales, I don’t like doing it’ |
| P9: ‘It’s obvious that he’s overweight…just by looking at him…I don’t weigh him but I can see…he’s bigger and taller than others but the body shape is altered…he has man boobs’ |
| P10: ‘I didn’t want to check weight on scales not to emphasise the numbers to him and make a big deal about it’ |
| P12: ‘I never checked weight but you could just see that she’s bigger, especially around the middle’ |
| P13: ‘He’s not proportionally overweight, he doesn’t look overweight…and he is not unfit’ |
| P14: ‘Looks a little chubby’ |
| P15: ‘She is not fat, doesn’t have a big belly like the other kids…when you look at her she doesn’t look overweight’ |
| P16: ‘I noticed that the clothes were getting tighter, she preferred to wear pants with elastic waist rather than jeans…in dancing clothes she was really sucking in her tummy and in comparison to other girls she looks bigger…I never used scales but I noticed that I was struggling to pick her up when giving her a hug’ |
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| P4: ‘He notices that he’s bigger than other kids…[he] gets bullied and called fat and lazy’ |
| P6: ‘He realised himself that he is bigger, gets tired easily and asked me why he is slow and fat’ |
| P7: ‘She [daughter] came in crying and said to me [mother] ‘why am I fat…I am fat” |
| P8: ‘He was aware of his own weight, wanted trendy clothes as the other kids but there was no size for him’ |
| P10: ‘She feels different to other children, told me that she doesn’t want to do sport anymore, gets tired easily, complained that nobody wanted her on their team’ |
| P11: ‘She feels bad about herself and own body…she said ‘I hate myself, I hate my body, just kill me’ |
| P14: ‘He often complains about his red hair, freckles, his tummy, that he is slow and useless. He really brings himself down…he feels that he is just not good enough and weight is just one more things added to it all’ |
| P16: ‘In bath he sometimes tells me: ‘Mummy look at layers on my tummy” |
| P17: ‘Pretty clothes at the shops don’t fit her…because she has a big tummy…she gets upset because she looks awful’ |
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| P1: ‘I don’t want her to feel bad about weight’ |
| P4: ‘I spoke to him [about starting PEACH], he was very hesitant…he was worried that it may be another situation when he will be told that he’s fat, eats too much’ |
| P6: 'I was worried what he may think that I think of him, I worried that he may think that I see him as fat' |
| P8: ‘When I spoke to him [child] about it [starting PEACH] he started crying and said: they will tell me that I’m fat’. |
| P17: ‘She [daughter] seems to think that skinny is healthy too…media shows only skinny people…children may think that skinny is good, is what the world wants…She [daughter] asked me not to tell anyone at school [about attending PEACH]…she doesn’t want to have attention drawn to her weight’ |
Theme 2: Comments about the influence of the support network on program participation
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| P2: ‘I mentioned the program to other parents…some discouraged us joining…they thought she will be put on a diet’ |
| P6: ‘I spoke to other parents [about joining the program], they said I shouldn’t enrol because it will make him feel bad about himself’ |
| P8: ‘he [child’s father] didn’t want to come in for the sessions…said ‘why do parents always get the blame?…he’s bad with eating habits too, can’t walk past the fridge without getting something out’ |
| P8: ‘I asked his teacher about the weight but she didn’t think it was an issue’ |
| P12: ‘Some friends said: why would you bother [enrolling to the program]’ |
| P16: ‘I told some parents at school and friends about the program and they said: he’s not fat, don’t put him in a weight loss program’ |
| P20: ‘Friends at work were surprised [to hear about mother joining the program]…they said that she [daughter] is not overweight. I don’t mind telling my side of the family but prefer not to share with my husband side of the family, they are all bigger people and may think: what are you doing it for?’ |
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| P1: ‘I never asked my GP for help with her weight issue…GP never weighs her’ |
| P4: ‘I went to GP to ask for help in the past because we were concerned…GP wasn’t concerned…said that he’s a kid and will grow out of it, things will sort themselves out….he [GP] looked at us and said that he [child] has a bigger frame because we have it too…GP only weighs children when prescribes antibiotics and never commented that there may be an issue with weight’ |
| P5: ‘GP never weighed kids, only when they were younger but no one ever flagged anything. Now kids are past the time when they get weighed by GP anyway’ |
| P12: ‘I was told by GP that things will sort themselves out and that she [daughter] will grow out of it…the only advice given was to eat healthy’ |
| P18: ‘GP was checking weight which was fine but it [weight] wasn’t flagged as an issue’ |
| P19: ‘I have been getting her weight checked at the GP clinic with a nurse…she [nurse] was plotting it all on a graph…didn’t say anything that she [daughter] is overweight but I could see that she is off the graph…I asked her advice [nurse’s], she didn’t have any advice…I asked GP and he said that the main thing is that she [daughter] needs to be active’ |
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| P4: ‘we asked [GP] for referral to a dietitian, it was good…but the dietitian was talking to us…didn’t take the time to talk to him’ |
| P7: ‘We tried so many things…dietitian, GP, paediatrician, no one could help us. I was not impressed with the dietitian, she only spoke to me and didn’t make any effort to build rapport with her [the child]. I thought it was a little waste of time ….I could see that she [the child] is not interested because she was not included in the conversation…and then suddenly was told to eat this or that’ |
| P10: ‘we saw a nutritionist a few times….it was good but a lot [what was recommended] we were already doing at home’ |
| P12: ‘I went to GP and dietitians for help but found that it was not enough, it was food based only…adult focused advice not child focused. They spoke to me more than to her. I regret taking her to the dietitian, she was nice but gave us all these charts and explained it all…she [daughter] at home later on said that she’s so fat according to these graphs and was upset about it’ |
| P13: ‘GP wanted to refer us to dietitian but I declined…I didn’t want him to be worried too much about weight and possibly develop an eating disorder later on’ |
| P15: ‘Once the dietitian took the diet history she said that she’s not sure what we are doing there because we eat very healthy’ |
| P16: ‘We visited a nutritionist at the hospital…it was useful but there was a long wait…the consultation wasn’t long enough and there was no follow up…when we saw a nutritionist later on, it was a different person…it wasn’t very good’ |
| P20: ‘I have been taking him [child] to many doctors, they did many different test but found nothing, at the end they told me: it’s obviously your fault, you let him eat everything and he doesn’t exercise’ |
Theme 3: Comments regarding parents’ perceived control over children’s weight issue
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| P3: ‘I joined it [PEACH] out of shear frustration, I changed my own lifestyle and from just a regular guy became a fitness fanatic…the girls are complete opposite, they are becoming more lazy and fatter every day. They are heading into an opposite direction.’ |
| P8: ‘I’m not sure what to do when he’s hungry all the time…he eats a lot’ |
| P10: ‘It [following healthy lifestyle at home] stopped working, she was getting bigger and her weight was going up quickly…we tried a lot at home but got to a point where it wasn’t enough anymore….I’m willing to try anything’ |
| P13: ‘He’s got problems with eating and acts on impulses….he goes and eats inappropriate foods at night [ice cream at 4 am] when everyone is still asleep’ |
| P17: ‘It’s my fault…we eat healthy on weekdays but eat out on weekends and it’s hard to go back to healthy eating on Monday…I’m worried about holidays…I hope it won’t destroy what they have changed so far’ |
| P20: ‘I was concerned about her weight and attitudes towards food and behaviour. She sometimes steals food from other children’s lunchboxes, complains all the time that she is hungry although there is just no way that it is possible she may be hungry. She is lying about what she had eaten…we didn’t know what to do about it’ |
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| P3: ‘I’m looking for skills to help the girls help themselves, to learn how to teach them skills to help themselves and become healthy’ |
| P4: ‘I joined [PEACH] and wish for him to accept himself, realise that he may not be as slim as other children but he can still be healthy. To understand the feeling of fullness so he doesn’t keep on eating’ |
| P5: ‘I want her to hear about healthy lifestyle from someone else’ |
| P11: ‘I want to give her an opportunity to learn….and understand how food works in the body….to help her with confidence and reassure her that she’s not alone in the word feeling bad’ |
| P12: ‘I was looking for help with educating her, she is old enough to be able to make own decisions about food and may listen better to advice provided by other people than parents’ |
| P13: ‘Kids tend to listen better when it’s [information] coming from someone else’ |
| P17: ‘Sometimes it’s difficult to explain things to kids, what to eat, what to do, so they sometimes listen better when these things come from other people’ |
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| P1: ‘He [ex-partner and child’s father] must learn more about nutrition because he feeds the kids pasta and potatoes five times a week’ |
| P3: ‘I’m trying to role model but find that management of it all (weight issue) is hard because their mother [ex-partner] does not support my efforts’ |
| P12: ‘Media definitely plays a role here…programs like the Biggest Loser show kids that it’s ok to pick on fat people… Advertising makes it very hard for families with a child who is overweight…kids play sport and only junk food is in cafeteria and junk food vouchers are given as rewards [after games]. Dealing with fast food ads and children and healthy eating is very hard’ |
| P14: ‘Media definitely influences children’s food choices, they want yoghurts with their favourite characters, meals with toys…when eating out none of the kids’ meals options at restaurants are nutritious…we buy them an adult meal because is it more nutritious’ |
| P15: ‘Media shows unrealistic images of very thin children. No one looks like that’ |
| P18: ‘Media plays a huge role…advertising food, bad food…kids are drawn to it and then want to get it. It’s difficult to deal with it.’ |
| P19: ‘I’m annoyed that in children’s shows you can see healthy weight range children eating crap food and no one talks then about the food being healthy or not…not everyone has a weight problem but there should be something said there about it.’ |
| P20: ‘Media keeps on advertising fast food, and you get toys. They try to say they have healthy options but have you ever hear a child saying – mum can I have yoghurt when at Maccas? They all want the happy meal.’ |