| Literature DB >> 29641437 |
Amber Tang1, Meimei Ji2, Yefu Zhang3, Jiaojiao Zou4, Mingzhi Li5, Lina Yang6, Qian Lin7.
Abstract
Introduction: Early childhood obesity in China has become a pressing public health concern. A substantial barrier to healthy weight management is poor parental recognition of child overweight. This study examined the relationship between caregiver perceptions of child weight and dietary practices.Entities:
Keywords: China; caregiver perception; dietary behaviors; pediatric obesity
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29641437 PMCID: PMC5923758 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph15040716
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Demographic and household characteristics of participants by weight status.
| Normal ( | Overweight/Obese ( | Total ( | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0.463 | |||||||
| Male | 146 | (48.8) | 35 | (53.8) | 181 | (49.7) | |
| Female | 153 | (51.2) | 30 | (46.2) | 183 | (50.3) | |
| 0.800 | |||||||
| <4 | 101 | (33.8) | 25 | (38.5) | 126 | (34.6) | |
| 4–5 | 120 | (40.1) | 27 | (41.5) | 147 | (40.4) | |
| 5–6 | 66 | (22.1) | 11 | (16.9) | 77 | (21.2) | |
| 6–7 | 12 | (4.0) | 2 | (3.1) | 14 | (3.8) | |
| 0.976 | |||||||
| Yes | 188 | (62.9) | 41 | (63.1) | 229 | (62.9) | |
| No | 111 | (37.1) | 24 | (36.9) | 135 | (37.1) | |
| 0.204 | |||||||
| <7000 RMB | 35 | (11.7) | 3 | (4.6) | 38 | (10.4) | |
| 7000–11,000 RMB | 105 | (35.1) | 27 | (41.5) | 132 | (36.2) | |
| >11,000 RMB | 159 | (53.2) | 35 | (53.8) | 194 | (53.3) | |
| 0.937 | |||||||
| Mother | 202 | (67.6) | 46 | (70.8) | 248 | (68.1) | |
| Father | 22 | (7.4) | 4 | (6.2) | 26 | (7.1) | |
| Grandparent | 70 | (23.4) | 15 | (23.1) | 85 | (23.4) | |
| Other | 5 | (1.7) | 0 | (0.0) | 5 | (1.4) | |
| 0.204 | |||||||
| ≤Senior secondary school | 86 | (28.8) | 18 | (27.7) | 104 | (28.6) | |
| College | 60 | (20.1) | 9 | (13.8) | 69 | (19.0) | |
| >College | 153 | (51.2) | 38 | (58.5) | 191 | (52.5) | |
| 3.410 ± 0.839 | 3.338 ± 0.502 | 3.398 ± 0.789 | 0.506 | ||||
| 21.029 ± 2.319 | 21.867 ± 2.835 | 21.178 ± 2.436 | 0.029 * | ||||
| 23.816 ± 2.776 | 24.776 ± 2.543 | 23.988 ± 2.757 | 0.008 * | ||||
Differences were analyzed using Chi-squared tests; * p < 0.05, statistically significant difference.
Differences in dietary behaviors between normal-weight and overweight/obese children.
| Normal ( | Overweight/Obese ( | Total ( | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0.615 | |||||||
| Often/daily | 255 | (85.3) | 57 | (87.7) | 312 | (85.7) | |
| Never/rarely | 44 | (14.7) | 8 | (12.3) | 52 | (14.3) | |
| 0.406 | |||||||
| Often/daily | 210 | (70.2) | 49 | (75.4) | 259 | (71.2) | |
| Never/rarely | 89 | (29.8) | 16 | (24.6) | 105 | (28.8) | |
| 0.013 * | |||||||
| <15 min | 14 | (4.7) | 10 | (15.4) | 24 | (6.6) | |
| 15–30 min | 177 | (59.2) | 33 | (50.8) | 210 | (57.7) | |
| >30 min | 108 | (36.1) | 22 | (33.8) | 130 | (35.7) | |
| 0.068 | |||||||
| Yes | 242 | (80.9) | 46 | (70.8) | 288 | (79.1) | |
| No | 57 | (19.1) | 19 | (29.2) | 76 | (20.9) | |
| 0.010 * | |||||||
| Yes | 181 | (60.5) | 28 | (43.1) | 209 | (57.4) | |
| No | 118 | (39.5) | 37 | (56.9) | 155 | (42.6) | |
| 0.027 * | |||||||
| Yes | 132 | (44.1) | 19 | (29.2) | 151 | (41.5) | |
| No | 167 | (55.9) | 46 | (70.8) | 213 | (58.5) | |
| <0.001 * | |||||||
| Yes | 256 | (85.6) | 34 | (52.3) | 290 | (79.7) | |
| No | 43 | (14.4) | 31 | (47.7) | 74 | (20.3) | |
| 0.527 | |||||||
| Yes | 249 | (83.3) | 52 | (80.0) | 301 | (82.7) | |
| No | 50 | (16.7) | 13 | (20.0) | 63 | (17.3) | |
| 217 | (72.6%) | 45 | (69.2%) | 262 | (72.0%) | 0.586 | |
Differences were analyzed using Chi-squared tests; * p < 0.05, statistically significant difference; DDS = Dietary Diversity Score.
Differences in caregiver attitudes, beliefs, and efforts pertaining to child weight between normal-weight and overweight/obese children.
| Caption | Normal ( | Overweight/Obese ( | Total ( | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0.035 * | |||||||
| Yes | 114 | (38.1) | 34 | (52.3) | 148 | (40.7) | |
| No | 185 | (61.9) | 31 | (47.7) | 216 | (59.3) | |
| <0.001 * | |||||||
| Underweight | 124 | (41.5) | 2 | (3.1) | 126 | (34.6) | |
| Normal | 170 | (56.9) | 38 | (58.5) | 208 | (57.1) | |
| Overweight/obese | 5 | (1.7) | 25 | (38.5) | 30 | (8.2) | |
| <0.001 * | |||||||
| Thinner | 8 | (2.7) | 27 | (41.5) | 35 | (9.6) | |
| No change | 148 | (49.5) | 36 | (55.4) | 184 | (50.5) | |
| Fatter | 143 | (47.8) | 2 | (3.1) | 145 | (39.8) | |
| <0.001 * | |||||||
| Thinner figure (E–G) | 124 | (41.5) | 9 | (13.8) | 133 | (36.5) | |
| Moderate figure (D) | 172 | (57.5) | 45 | (69.2) | 217 | (59.6) | |
| Heavier figure (A–C) | 3 | (1.0) | 11 | (16.9) | 14 | (3.8) | |
| 0.890 | |||||||
| Thinner figure (E–G) | 49 | (16.4) | 12 | (18.5) | 61 | (16.8) | |
| Moderate figure (D) | 244 | (81.6) | 52 | (80.0) | 296 | (81.3) | |
| Heavier figure (A–C) | 6 | (2.0) | 1 | (1.5) | 7 | (1.9) | |
| Overweight children are more likely to be overweight/obese in adulthood | 223 | (74.6) | 45 | (69.2) | 268 | (73.6) | 0.375 |
| Overweight/obese children are less healthy | 234 | (78.3) | 49 | (75.4) | 283 | (77.7) | 0.613 |
| Being overweight/obese impacts interpersonal relationships | 177 | (59.2) | 41 | (63.1) | 218 | (59.9) | 0.563 |
| Exercise | 170 | (56.9) | 46 | (70.8) | 216 | (59.3) | 0.038 * |
| Eat less meat | 16 | (5.4) | 13 | (20.0) | 29 | (8.0) | <0.001 * |
| Eat less rice | 5 | (1.7) | 6 | (9.2) | 11 | (3.0) | 0.006 * |
| Reduce food intake | 10 | (3.3) | 21 | (32.3) | 31 | (8.5) | <0.001 * |
| Increase food intake | 101 | (33.8) | 5 | (7.7) | 106 | (29.1) | <0.001 * |
| None of these | 72 | (24.1) | 12 | (18.5) | 84 | (23.1) | 0.330 |
Differences were analyzed using Chi-squared tests; * p < 0.05, statistically significant difference.
Odds ratios for caregiver underestimation of child weight status.
| Adjusted OR (95% CI) | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| 0.958 | (0.730, 1.259) | 0.759 | |
| Male | 1.768 | (1.129, 2.770) | 0.013 * |
| Female | Reference | ||
| 0.926 | (0.841, 1.020) | 0.118 | |
| <7000 RMB | 1.491 | (0.709, 3.135) | 0.292 |
| 7000–11,000 RMB | 1.697 | (1.042, 2.762) | 0.033 * |
| >11,000 RMB | Reference | ||
| Mother | 1.173 | (0.558, 2.466) | 0.673 |
| Father | 1..266 | (0.415, 3.860) | 0.679 |
| Grandparent | Reference | ||
| ≤Secondary school | 1.518 | (0.719, 3.202) | 0.274 |
| College | 0.657 | (0.352, 1.225) | 0.186 |
| >College | Reference | ||
* p < 0.05, statistically significant difference; adjusted for student body mass index (BMI).
Associations between caregiver perceptions of child weight and dietary habits for overweight/obese children.
| Caption | Underestimated ( | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| OR (95% CI) | |||
| Fixed meal times | 0.352 | (0.028, 4.369) | 0.417 |
| Fixed meal amounts | 0.257 | (0.041, 1.624) | 0.149 |
| Needs to be spoon-fed | 0.230 | (0.037, 1.406) | 0.112 |
| Walks/plays while eating | 0.250 | (0.057, 1.088) | 0.065 |
| Holds food in mouth | 1.093 | (0.473, 2.534) | 0.904 |
| Has a poor appetite | 5.883 | (1.461, 23.693) | 0.013 * |
| Picky eater | 1.764 | (0.377, 8.243) | 0.471 |
| DDS (≥5 of 6) | 0.377 | (0.028, 4.995) | 0.459 |
| Worries about child’s weight | 0.023 | (0.003, 0.193) | 0.001 * |
| Wishes child would maintain or gain weight | 47.065 | (6.374, 347.489) | <0.001 * |
| Moderate ideal body shape | 1.842 | (0.365, 9.282) | 0.459 |
| Exercise | 0.317 | (0.072, 1.406) | 0.131 |
| Eat less meat | 0.136 | (0.026, 0.711) | 0.018 * |
| Eat less rice | 0.247 | (0.025, 2.447) | 0.232 |
| Reduce food intake | 0.189 | (0.041, 0.874) | 0.033 * |
| None of these | 13.061 | (1.138, 149.959) | 0.039 * |
a Caregivers who accurately identified child weight were used as the reference group; * p < 0.05, statistically significant difference; adjusted for age, body mass index (BMI), income, caregiver education.