| Literature DB >> 33808698 |
Fairley Le Moal1,2,3, Maxime Michaud2, Carol Anne Hartwick-Pflaum4, Georgia Middleton3, Isabelle Mallon1, John Coveney3.
Abstract
There exists a normative representation of family meals in contemporary Western societies which is promoted as imperative through public health programs, larger discourses and by some studies in the nutritional and public health research fields. Family meals, also called domestic commensality, are represented as convivial events and are associated with positive health and wellbeing outcomes but there is minimal evidence to show they are beneficial for family members and it is not known which aspect of the family meal could be responsible for these alleged benefits. This normative family meal image is based on a representation of the family as a peaceful unit exempt from external constraints. This narrative literature review of qualitative studies of family meals seeks to put forward the underlying premises of this representation and compare it with reports about actual practices. The results emphasize that eating together is still practiced and remains valued by family members, which is in contrast to discourses lamenting the decline of the family meal. However, the valorisation and recurrence of family meals depends on class, gender and cultural positions. There is a gap between the norm of healthy or convivial and achievable family meals, which can reinforce the so-called "mental load" and "emotion work" of those in charge of feeding the family and heighten inequalities within the household. In fact, there are many challenges to family meals which originate from external constraints or are inherent aspects of family life. The results from this review suggest that we should focus on family meals by taking into account the food work surrounding it and focussing on the interactional aspects of family meals. Ethnographic methods allow the researcher to observe the diversities and complexities of commensality as well as family dynamics and, in doing so, could provide more realistic representations of eating within the family.Entities:
Keywords: conflicts; emotion work; ethnography; family meal; health norm; interactions; practices
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33808698 PMCID: PMC8003368 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph18063186
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Keywords used for the databases searches.
| Databases Search Keywords | |
|---|---|
| English | “family meal”, “family mealtime”, “family dinner”, “shared meal”, “commensality”, “domestic commensality”, “eat together”, “eating together”, “family food practices”, “family food work” |
| French | “repas de famille”, “repas en famille”, “commensalité”, “commensalité domestique”, “commensalité familiale”, “ manger ensemble”, “ manger en famille », “ pratiques alimentaires familiales” |
The normative family meal promotion: assumption, premises and limitations.
| Premise | Families Do Not Eat Together Enough or Properly | Family Meals Provide Health Benefits | Family Meals Are Always Convivial |
|---|---|---|---|
| Associations | Critique of the individualisation of food practices | Critique of eating alone (supposedly unhealthy, | Confusion between commensality and conviviality |
| Origins of these premises and associations | This lament is not new: it already existed at the end of the 19th century (France) and at the beginning of the 20th (UK) | Healthification process of food practices (preventive approach) | Representation of the family as a peaceful and non-hierarchical unit |
| Issues identified | Families are still eating together | There is limited evidence that family meals provide health and wellbeing benefits | Conflicts are inherent to families |
Prevalence of family meals: selection of results.
| Authors | Year | Country (City) | Method | Sample | Results and Limits |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Michaud et al. [ | 2004 | France | Phone survey (+/− 30 min) | 3153 | 86.2% of respondents who live with family members “have dinner with the family” No definition of “have dinner with the family” What proportion of respondents live with family? |
| Pettinger et al. [ | 2006 | France (Montpellier) | Self-administered questionnaires | 766 | 64.5% “eat together as a household on a daily basis” No definition of “eat together as a household” Family composition of respondents? |
| Riou et al. [ | 2015 | France (Paris) | Face to face questionnaires during home visits | 2994 | 23% of sample: 3 meals (89%), mostly at home (89%), with the family (61.7% share meal with the family more than 75% of the time). |
| Gallegos et al. [ | 2010 | Australia (Perth) | Online and paper-based survey (+/− 15 min) | 625 | 61% indicated the previous night’s meal was “eaten at the same time and place as everyone else in the family”. Day of survey? |
| Pettinger et al. [ | 2006 | England (Nottingham) | Self-administered questionnaires | 826 | 51% reported eating together as a household on a daily basis No definition of “eat together as a household” Family composition of respondents? |
| Kjærnes (ed.) [ | 2001 | Nordic countries | Phone survey | Representative samples(≥15 years old) | Households: couple with child(ren) Restrictive definition of the family meal |
| Sobal and Hanson [ | 2011 | US | Phone survey | 882 adults living with family members | 53%: family meals seven or more times per week Difficult to define a “typical week” |
Key findings from qualitative studies of family meals.
| Key Results | Example of Empirical Evidence | References | |
|---|---|---|---|
| The practices of family meals are socially situated | Conversations | Middle classes: emphasis on family mealtime conversations and particularly with children | De Vault 1991 (US) |
| Working class: conversations seem less important | De Vault 1991 (US) | ||
| Negotiation of food choices | Higher classes: important that all family members eat the same food during the meals, leaving less room for negotiations with children (control over children’s diet) | Maurice 2015 (France) | |
| Lower classes: children have more agency in the choice of the food they eat | Maurice 2015 (France) | ||
| Conviviality | Middle classes:
meals are expected to be a convivial moment conviviality as social distinction | Phull et al. 2015 (France) | |
| Barriers to having | Scheduling conflicts: school, extracurricular activities and adult work | Middleton et al. 2019 (international review)Jarrett 2016 (US) | |
| Lack of time because of household chores that are done while children eat | |||
| Scarcity of help for the meal preparation | |||
| Limited resources (money and space to have family meals) | |||
| Parent(s) being too tired to eat with the children | |||
| Lack of ideas or confidence | |||
| Children characterised by parents as “picky eater” | |||
| Other activities are prioritized over family meals (sports, etc.) | |||
| Challenges during family meals | Children’s physical behaviour characterised as “disruptive” by parents (i.e., not sitting “properly”, being “messy”, “improper” use of utensils) | Wilk 2010 (US) | |
| Children characterised by parents as “picky eaters”, food refusal (also linked to resistance of parental authority) | |||
| Children’s behaviours characterised as difficult by parents: fighting or playing between sibling | |||
| Improper discussion or not enough discussion | |||
| Mealtime synchronisation: family member eating too quickly or too slowly | |||
| Family members being tired and strategic efforts to prevent usual conflicts become difficult | |||
| Family mealtimes are gendered events | Middle class women: emphasis on conversations with children during meals and some women from working class also strive to construct the meal as family communication occasion, which constituted source of conflict with husband | De Vault 1991, US | |
| Link between mothers’ domestic food role with family cohesion and conviviality | Phull et al. 2015 | ||