The impact of deprivation and neighbourhood food environments on home food environments, parental feeding practices, child eating behaviours, food preferences and BMI: The Family Food Experience Study-London.

IF 5.5 1区 医学 Q1 NUTRITION & DIETETICS
Andrea D Smith, Alice Kininmonth, Kristiane Tommerup, David Boniface, Chiara Gericke, Tiffany Denning, Carolyn Summerbell, Christina Vogel, Clare Llewellyn
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Childhood obesity inequalities in England persist despite targeted interventions focused on promoting healthy diets and food environments. This study, part of the Family Food Experience Study-London, aimed to investigate the impact of deprivation and neighbourhood food environments on home food environments, parental feeding practices, child eating behaviours, food preferences, and child BMI.

Methods: Families (n = 728) with primary school-aged children were recruited from four socioeconomically diverse London boroughs in 2022. Data were collected through computer-assisted interviews (30.8% in-person, 69.2% telephone) on home food environment, parental feeding practices, and children's eating behaviours and food preferences. Deprivation was characterised using a composite measure of family and neighbourhood indicators of socioeconomic position. Neighbourhood food environment exposures were estimated from individualised activity spaces derived from home postcodes and reported commuting patterns. Child BMI was measured objectively. Generalised linear models examined cross-sectional associations between deprivation and neighbourhood food environment with family food-related outcomes, adjusting for school-level clustering, child sex, age and ethnicity.

Results: Greater family deprivation was significantly associated with more 'obesogenic' family food practices, child eating behaviours and child BMI. Deprivation was linked to higher food responsiveness (β = -0.12, p = 0.002), emotional overeating (β = -0.11, p < 0.001), and increased desire to drink (β = -0.26, p < 0.001). Parents in more deprived households used more emotional (β = -0.10, p < 0.05), instrumental (β = -0.11, p = 0.003) and pressuring feeding practices (β = -0.14, p < 0.001). Greater deprivation was also associated with a more obesogenic home food environment (β = -0.19, p < 0.001) and lower meal structure (β = 0.17, p < 0.001). Exposure to less healthy neighbourhood food environments around and between home and school were associated with a more obesogenic home food environment (β = -0.07, p < 0.01), but no significant associations were found with feeding practices, child eating behaviours or child BMI.

Conclusions: In this study, family deprivation, rather than neighbourhood food environments, was more strongly linked to obesogenic feeding practices, child eating behaviours and child BMI. Policies focusing on improving neighbourhood food environments will likely be most effective if combined with those addressing systemic issues related to deprivation such as welfare policies (e.g. reforms to benefit caps) or targeted subsidies for healthy food. Future research should examine the independent and accumulative impact that environment and household interventions have on childhood obesity inequalities.

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贫困和邻里食物环境对家庭食物环境、父母喂养做法、儿童饮食行为、食物偏好和体重指数的影响:家庭食物体验研究-伦敦。
背景:尽管有针对性的干预措施侧重于促进健康饮食和食物环境,但英国儿童肥胖不平等现象仍然存在。这项研究是伦敦家庭食物体验研究的一部分,旨在调查贫困和邻里食物环境对家庭食物环境、父母喂养方式、儿童饮食行为、食物偏好和儿童体重指数的影响。方法:在2022年从伦敦四个不同社会经济的行政区招募了有小学学龄儿童的家庭(n = 728)。通过计算机辅助访谈(30.8%面对面访谈,69.2%电话访谈)收集有关家庭食物环境、父母喂养方式、儿童饮食行为和食物偏好的数据。贫困的特征是使用家庭和社区社会经济地位指标的综合衡量标准。邻里食物环境暴露是根据家庭邮政编码和报告的通勤模式得出的个性化活动空间来估计的。客观测量儿童BMI。广义线性模型检验了贫困、邻里食物环境与家庭食物相关结果之间的横断面关联,调整了学校水平的聚类、儿童性别、年龄和种族。结果:更多的家庭剥夺与更多的“致肥性”家庭饮食习惯、儿童饮食行为和儿童体重指数显著相关。剥夺与较高的食物反应性(β = -0.12, p = 0.002)、情绪性暴饮暴食(β = -0.11, p)有关。结论:在这项研究中,家庭剥夺,而不是邻里食物环境,与肥胖的喂养方式、儿童饮食行为和儿童体重指数有更强的联系。注重改善邻里粮食环境的政策,如果与解决与剥夺有关的系统性问题的政策相结合,如福利政策(如改革福利上限)或有针对性的健康食品补贴,可能最为有效。未来的研究应该检查环境和家庭干预对儿童肥胖不平等的独立和累积影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
13.80
自引率
3.40%
发文量
138
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: International Journal of Behavioral Nutrition and Physical Activity (IJBNPA) is an open access, peer-reviewed journal offering high quality articles, rapid publication and wide diffusion in the public domain. IJBNPA is devoted to furthering the understanding of the behavioral aspects of diet and physical activity and is unique in its inclusion of multiple levels of analysis, including populations, groups and individuals and its inclusion of epidemiology, and behavioral, theoretical and measurement research areas.
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