| Literature DB >> 29983998 |
Lucine Francis1, Lara Shodeinde1, Maureen M Black2,3, Jerilyn Allen1,4,5.
Abstract
Childhood obesity is a major public health concern in the US. More than a third of young children 2-5 years old are placed in nonrelative child care for the majority of the day, making the child care setting an important venue to spearhead obesity prevention. Much of the obesity research in child care has focused on center-based facilities, with emerging research on Family Child Care Homes (FCCHs)-child care operated in a home setting outside the child's home. The purpose of this review was to assess the obesogenic attributes of the FCCH environment. A search of the PubMed, Embase, CINHAL, and PsycINFO electronic databases identified 3,281 citations; 35 eligible for full-text review, and 18 articles from 17 studies in the analysis. This review found a lack of comprehensive written nutrition and physical activity policies within FCCHs, lack of FCCH providers trained in nutrition and physical activity best practices, lack of adequate equipment and space for indoor and outdoor playtime activities in FCCHs, inaccurate nutrition-related beliefs and perceptions among FCCH providers, poor nutrition-related communication with families, and poor feeding practices. Future research focusing on interventions aimed at addressing these problem areas can contribute to obesity prevention.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29983998 PMCID: PMC6015672 DOI: 10.1155/2018/3490651
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Obes ISSN: 2090-0708
Figure 1Preferred reporting items for systematic and meta-analyses diagram depicting the flow of records.
The policy, physical, and sociocultural environment of family child care homes.
| Citation/year/state/method | Sample description | Data source/measures | Policy environment | Physical environment | Sociocultural environment | EBRBs | Covariates in analyses (potential demographic moderators) |
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| Nutrition | |||||||
| Freedman and Alvarez [ |
| Modified SCFQ and HCFSQ |
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| Liu et al. [ |
| Modified NAPSACC and EPAO |
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| Natale et al. [ |
| Modified HSFFQ |
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| Ritchie et al. [ |
| Adapted NAPSACC |
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| Ritchie et al. [ |
| Adapted NAPSACC |
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| Tandon et al. [ |
| NAPSACC | FCCHs + Centers = follow best practice recommendations for serving water at least daily + sugar sweetened beverages | ||||
| Tovar et al. [ |
| Modified EPAO |
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| Trost et al. [ |
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dNAPSACC | Nutrition policy 2.41 ± 0.5 | Menus and variety 2.50 ± 0.6 |
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| Trost et al. [ |
| NAPSACC | Written guidelines concerning type of foods brought for celebrations 18.6% (95% CI: 13.7, 23.4) | Received nutrition training ≥1x/yr 47.5% (95% CI: 41.2, 53.8) | Family-style meals 23% (95% CI: 17.7, 28.4) | Served lean meats >4x/wk 41.7% (95% CI: 35.4, 48) | |
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| Physical activity | |||||||
| Liu et al. [ |
| Modified NAPSACC and EPAO |
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| Natale et al. [ |
| ePAFQ |
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| Rice and Trost [ |
| ActiGraph GT1M accelerometer | Avg. participation in MVPA and total PA |
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| Tandon et al. [ |
| NAPSACC |
| 50% of preschoolers in FCCHs <1 hr/day outdoor play time | |||
| Tandon et al. [ |
| ECLS-B | 50% of home-based providers take the child outside to walk or play ≥1x/day | ||||
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| Trost et al. [ |
| NAPSACC | PA policy | Play environment 3.10 ± 0.6 | Supporting physical activity 2.40 ± 0.7 | Active play and inactive time 3.20 ± 0.4 | |
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| Trost et al. [ |
| NAPSACC | Existence of comprehensive written policy on PA 24.9% (95% CI: 19.5, 30.3) | Suitable space indoors when weather is bad 17.6% (95% CI: 12.8, 22.3) | Restricted active play time for misbehavior 62.7% (95% CI: 56.6, 68.7) | TV turned on every day for at least part of the day 64.6% (95% CI: 58.7, 70.5) | |
aIncluded results regarding ethnicity since a great percentage of homes were Hispanic; bsignificantly different from center based; cFCCHs more likely to care for children enrolled in federal subsidy programs; dScoring guide: 1 = marginally meeting child care standards, 2 = meeting child care standards, 3 = exceeding child care standards, and 4 = far exceeding child care standards and using best practice; edeveloped based on physical activity standards from Caring for Our Children National Health and Safety Performance Standards; SCFQ = Stanford Child Feeding Questionnaire; HCFSQ = Hughes Caregiver Feeding Styles Questionnaire; EPAO = Environment and Policy Assessment and Observation; HSFFQ = Harvard Service Food Frequency Questionnaire; PAFQ = Physical Activity Frequency Questionnaire; ECLS-B = Early Childhood Longitudinal Study-Birth Cohort; FCCHs = Family Child Care Homes; NAPSACC = Nutrition and Physical Activity Self-Assessment for Child Care; CACFP = Child and Adult Care Food Program; PA = physical activity; MVPA = moderate to vigorous physical activity; TPA = total physical activity; M = mean; SD = standard deviation; ns = not significant; mos. = months.
TPB Concepts_Attitudes, subjective norm, perceived behavioral control, intent and practices + knowledge.
| Citation/year/state/method | Sample description | Study concepts ( | Results on TPB-related concepts | Association between TPB concepts and child care practices | Covariates in analyses (potential demographic moderators) |
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| Brann [ |
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| Kim et al. [ |
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| Lindsay et al. [ |
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| Rosenthal et al. [ |
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| Tovar et al. [ |
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| Vinci et al. [ |
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| Van Stan et al. [ |
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aMissing data for five providers; FCCH = Family Child Care Homes; EEC = Early Education and Care; BMI = body mass index; PA = physical activity; MVPA = moderate to vigorous physical activity; TPA = total physical activity; U = Mann–Whitney test.