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How Minority Parents Could Help Children Develop Healthy Eating Behaviors: Parent and Child Perspectives

Minority children and children living in under-resourced households are at the greatest risk for obesity and diet-related disparities. Identifying effective strategies to reduce these risks is an important step in child obesity prevention. Parents influence the home environment and play a critical r...

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Autores principales: Callender, Chishinga, Velazquez, Denisse, Adera, Meheret, Dave, Jayna M., Olvera, Norma, Chen, Tzu-An, Alford, Shana, Thompson, Debbe
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7766451/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33353032
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nu12123879
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author Callender, Chishinga
Velazquez, Denisse
Adera, Meheret
Dave, Jayna M.
Olvera, Norma
Chen, Tzu-An
Alford, Shana
Thompson, Debbe
author_facet Callender, Chishinga
Velazquez, Denisse
Adera, Meheret
Dave, Jayna M.
Olvera, Norma
Chen, Tzu-An
Alford, Shana
Thompson, Debbe
author_sort Callender, Chishinga
collection PubMed
description Minority children and children living in under-resourced households are at the greatest risk for obesity and diet-related disparities. Identifying effective strategies to reduce these risks is an important step in child obesity prevention. Parents influence the home environment and play a critical role in child obesity prevention. Eighteen parent–child dyads living in under-resourced Houston area communities participated in a mixed methods study (online surveys, telephone interviews). The purpose of the research reported here was to conduct a secondary analysis of the qualitative data to explore Black/African American and Hispanic parent and child perspectives of the ways in which parents could help their children make healthy food choices. Descriptive statistics were calculated for parent and child demographic characteristics; hybrid thematic analysis was used to code and analyze the interview transcripts. Frequencies were calculated for children’s interview responses to rating scales and the grade they gave their eating habits. Mothers’ responses were grouped into two broad categories: facilitators (modeling, availability, and teaching) as ways parents could help their child eat healthy, and barriers (lack of time, cost of healthy foods, and lack of knowledge) to helping their child eat healthy. Alternatively, child responses focused on ways in which parents could provide support: environmental support (home availability, home cooking, and introducing new foods) and personal support (providing child choice, teaching, and encouragement). Most children reported that eating healthy was easy, and most rated their personal eating habits as an A or B. These findings suggest that understanding the perspectives of Black/African American and Hispanic parent–child dyads can provide insight into the development of culturally and economically relevant healthy eating strategies and interventions for families living in under-resourced communities.
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spelling pubmed-77664512020-12-28 How Minority Parents Could Help Children Develop Healthy Eating Behaviors: Parent and Child Perspectives Callender, Chishinga Velazquez, Denisse Adera, Meheret Dave, Jayna M. Olvera, Norma Chen, Tzu-An Alford, Shana Thompson, Debbe Nutrients Article Minority children and children living in under-resourced households are at the greatest risk for obesity and diet-related disparities. Identifying effective strategies to reduce these risks is an important step in child obesity prevention. Parents influence the home environment and play a critical role in child obesity prevention. Eighteen parent–child dyads living in under-resourced Houston area communities participated in a mixed methods study (online surveys, telephone interviews). The purpose of the research reported here was to conduct a secondary analysis of the qualitative data to explore Black/African American and Hispanic parent and child perspectives of the ways in which parents could help their children make healthy food choices. Descriptive statistics were calculated for parent and child demographic characteristics; hybrid thematic analysis was used to code and analyze the interview transcripts. Frequencies were calculated for children’s interview responses to rating scales and the grade they gave their eating habits. Mothers’ responses were grouped into two broad categories: facilitators (modeling, availability, and teaching) as ways parents could help their child eat healthy, and barriers (lack of time, cost of healthy foods, and lack of knowledge) to helping their child eat healthy. Alternatively, child responses focused on ways in which parents could provide support: environmental support (home availability, home cooking, and introducing new foods) and personal support (providing child choice, teaching, and encouragement). Most children reported that eating healthy was easy, and most rated their personal eating habits as an A or B. These findings suggest that understanding the perspectives of Black/African American and Hispanic parent–child dyads can provide insight into the development of culturally and economically relevant healthy eating strategies and interventions for families living in under-resourced communities. MDPI 2020-12-18 /pmc/articles/PMC7766451/ /pubmed/33353032 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nu12123879 Text en © 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Callender, Chishinga
Velazquez, Denisse
Adera, Meheret
Dave, Jayna M.
Olvera, Norma
Chen, Tzu-An
Alford, Shana
Thompson, Debbe
How Minority Parents Could Help Children Develop Healthy Eating Behaviors: Parent and Child Perspectives
title How Minority Parents Could Help Children Develop Healthy Eating Behaviors: Parent and Child Perspectives
title_full How Minority Parents Could Help Children Develop Healthy Eating Behaviors: Parent and Child Perspectives
title_fullStr How Minority Parents Could Help Children Develop Healthy Eating Behaviors: Parent and Child Perspectives
title_full_unstemmed How Minority Parents Could Help Children Develop Healthy Eating Behaviors: Parent and Child Perspectives
title_short How Minority Parents Could Help Children Develop Healthy Eating Behaviors: Parent and Child Perspectives
title_sort how minority parents could help children develop healthy eating behaviors: parent and child perspectives
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7766451/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33353032
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nu12123879
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