| Literature DB >> 34068336 |
Katerina Sdravou1, Maria Fotoulaki1, Elpida Emmanouilidou-Fotoulaki1, Elias Andreoulakis2, Giorgos Makris3, Fotini Sotiriadou1, Athanasia Printza4.
Abstract
Feeding problems have been estimated to occur in approximately 25-45% of normally developing children. The aim of this study was to investigate the prevalence of feeding problems in typically developing young children in Greece. Child feeding behavior, parents' feelings about their child's feeding patterns, and parental feeding practices were also explored. Parents completed the Greek version of the Behavioral Pediatrics Feeding Assessment Scale (BPFAS). Data on 742 healthy, typically developing children aged two to seven years are presented. Overall, the majority of children in the sample showed high frequency of desirable mealtime behaviors and low frequency of undesirable mealtime behaviors. However, a significant proportion of the cohort presented with food neophobia and low consumption of vegetables. When applying test cut-off scores, it was found that 8.2% of the sample had abnormal Total Frequency Score (TFS) and 26.6% had abnormal Total Problem Score (TPS). The study showed that parent-reported feeding problems are quite common in children of typical development in Greece. Moreover, while the majority of the sample displayed a high frequency of favorable behaviors, specific child feeding behaviors are amenable to improvement.Entities:
Keywords: consumption of vegetables; feeding problems; food intake; food neophobia; healthy children; prevalence; typical development
Year: 2021 PMID: 34068336 PMCID: PMC8153308 DOI: 10.3390/children8050388
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Children (Basel) ISSN: 2227-9067
Main findings of feeding problem prevalence studies *.
| Study | Outcome Measure of Feeding Problem | Population | Country | Prevalence |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Marchi and Cohen, 1990 [ | Interview with mothers | 800 children | USA | 29% |
| Rydell et al., 1995 [ | Set of questions ** | 240 children | Sweden | 30% |
| Reau et al., 1996 [ | Set of questions | 130 infants | USA | 33% of infants |
| Cerro et al., 2002 [ | Set of questions | 95 children | New Zealand | 20% |
| Jacobi et al., 2003 [ | Single question | 135 children | USA | 21% |
| Esparo et al., 2004 [ | Set of questions | 851 children | Spain | 4.8% |
| Dubois et al., 2007 [ | Set of questions | 1498 preschoolers, | Canada | 14–17% |
| Wright et al., 2007 [ | Set of questions | 455 parents | UK | 8.3% |
| Hittner and Faith, 2011 [ | Set of questions | 487 children | USA | 9% |
| Micali et al., 2011 [ | Set of questions | 1327 children | Denmark | 7.3% picky eating |
| Goh et al., 2012 [ | Set of questions | 407 parents/grandparents of children aged 1 to 10 years | Singapore | 25.1% picky eating |
| Benjasuwantep et al., | Set of questions | 402 children | Thailand | 26.9% |
| Dubois et al., 2013 [ | Set of questions | 692 | Canada | 9.4% at 2.5 years |
| Hafstad et al., 2013 [ | Set of questions | 913 children | Norway | 22–35% |
| Equit et al., 2013 [ | Set of questions | 1090 children | Germany | 23.2% picky eating |
| Tharner et al., 2014 [ | Child Eating Behavior Questionnaire (CEBQ) | 3117 children | The Netherlands | 5.8% |
| Haszardet al., 2015 [ | Set of questions | 203 overweight children | New Zealand | 36.5% |
* All studies refer to a general description of feeding problems (including more than one unfavorable feeding behaviors such as food refusal, picky or fussy eating, prolonged mealtimes, lack of appetite etc.) and not to a particular behavior (e.g., picky eating); ** purpose made set of questions for the specific research.
Demographic and anthropometric characteristics of the sample and BPFAS scores.
| Child sex | Female | 372 (50.1) |
| Child age group | >5 years | 401 (54.0) |
| Only child | yes | 169 (22.8) |
| Firstborn | yes | 387 (52.2) |
| Parental sex | Female | 687 (92.6) |
| Parental age group | <40 years | 548 (73.9) |
| Parental education | >12 years | 408 (55.0) |
| Working parent | yes | 529 (71.3) |
| TFS score by cut-off | >84 | 61 (8.2) |
| TPS score by cut-off | >9 | 189 (26.6) |
| Child’s age (years) | Mean ± SD | 4.92 ± 1.00 |
| BMI z-score (current) | Mean ± SD | 0.28 ± 1.41 |
| Birth weight (grams) | Mean ± SD | 3268.43 ± 444.80 |
| TFS score | Mean ± SD | 62.71 ± 14.23 |
| TPS score | Mean ± SD | 6.23 ± 6.40 |
Bivariate correlations between TFS and TPS score and age, zBMI, and birthweight.
| TFS Score | TPS Score | |
|---|---|---|
| TFS |
| |
| TPS |
| |
| Child age | 0.053 (0.150) |
|
| zBMI |
|
|
| Birth Weight | −0.048 (0.191) | −0.030 (0.417) |
Spearman’s rho correlation coefficient (p value). Significant correlations are shown in bold.
Comparison of children with high vs. low TFS/TPS score in relation to demographics.
| TFS | TPS | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| TFS ≤ 84 | TFS > 84 | Chi Square |
| TPS ≤ 9 | TPS > 9 | Chi Square |
| ||
| Child sex | Female | 341 (50.1) | 31 (50.8) | 0.012 | 0.911 | 268 (51.3) | 87 (46.0) | 1.565 | 0.211 |
| Child age group | >5 years | 364 (53.5) | 37 (60.7) | 1.170 | 0.279 | 272 (52.1) | 117 (61.9) | 5376 |
|
| Only child | Yes | 150 (22.0) | 19 (31.1) | 2.648 | 0.104 | 107 (20.5) | 54 (28.6) | 5.163 |
|
| Firstborn | Yes | 342 (50.2) | 45 (73.8) | 12.443 |
| 255 (48.9) | 116 (61.4) | 8.724 |
|
| Parent sex | Female | 629 (92.4) | 58 (95.1) | 0.603 | 0.438 | 475 (91.0) | 181 (95.8) | 4.425 |
|
| Parent age group | <40 years | 496 (72.8) | 52 (85.2) | 4.467 |
| 370 (70.9) | 153 (81.0) | 7.236 |
|
| Parental education | Higher | 373 (54.8) | 35 (57.4) | 0.153 | 0.695 | 282 (54.0) | 109 (57.7) | 0.746 | 0.388 |
| Working parent | Yes | 485 (71.2) | 44 (72.1) | 0.023 | 0.880 | 374 (71.6) | 132 (69.8) | 0.221 | 0.639 |
| TFS ≤ 84 | TFS > 84 | U test (z) |
| TPS < 9 | TPS ≥ 9 | U test (z) |
| ||
| Child age | U = 22,533.0 | 0.272 | U = 55,351.0 |
| |||||
| zBMI | 4.92 ± 0.99 | 4.98 ± 1.09 | U = 13,848.0 |
| 4.88 ± 1.00 | 5.07 ± 0.95 | U = 37,233 |
| |
| Birth weight | 0.33 ± 1.36 | −0.25 ± 1.76 | U = 23,744.0 | 0.064 | 0.34 ± 1.36 | 0.07 ± 1.46 | U = 47,928.5 | 0.563 | |
Note: Percentages refer to the columns, i.e., within the classes of TFS or TPS score and not to the lines (demographic variable). Significance is shown in bold.