Weight- and Health-focused Conversations in Racially/Ethnically Diverse Households With and Without a Child with Overweight/Obesity.

IF 2.7 Q2 PSYCHOLOGY, SOCIAL
Stigma and Health Pub Date : 2023-05-01 Epub Date: 2020-09-03 DOI:10.1037/sah0000268
Jerica M Berge, Amanda Trofholz, Christine Danner, Dana Brandenburg, Snigdhasmrithi Pusalavidyasagar, Katie Loth
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Abstract

Studies indicate parent conversations focused on child weight, shape, or size are associated with unhealthy child weight and weight-related behaviors, whereas health-focused conversations are not. Little research has examined what these types of conversations sound like, how parents respond to them, and whether households with or without a child with overweight/obesity approach these conversations differently. This study used qualitative data to identify the weight- and health-focused conversations occurring in racially/ethnically diverse households. Children ages 5-7 and their families (n=150) from six racial/ethnic groups (i.e., African American, Hispanic, Hmong, Native American, Somali, White) participated in this mixed-methods study. Results showed that parents from households with and without a child with overweight/obesity engaged in similar weight- and health-focused conversations (qualitative themes = focus on growth; health consequences of having overweight/obesity; focus on dietary intake and physical activity; being direct about weight, shape or size; mixing weight- and health-focused conversations). In addition, findings showed that parents also engaged in different types of weight- and health focused conversations depending on whether the household had a child with overweight/obesity (qualitative themes = weight-based teasing; critiquing own weight) or without overweight/obesity (qualitative themes = differences in body shape and size are the norm; focus on modeling rather than talking). Results may be useful for informing public health interventions and for health care providers working with parents regarding weight- and health-focused conversations occurring in home environments of diverse children.

在有或没有超重/肥胖症儿童的种族/族裔多元化家庭中进行以体重和健康为重点的对话。
研究表明,家长在与孩子交谈时,如果只关注孩子的体重、体型或大小,则会导致孩子出现不健康的体重和与体重相关的行为,而关注健康的交谈则不会。很少有研究探讨这些类型的对话听起来像什么,家长如何回应这些对话,以及有或没有超重/肥胖儿童的家庭是否以不同的方式对待这些对话。本研究使用定性数据来确定在种族/族裔多元化家庭中发生的以体重和健康为重点的对话。来自六个种族/民族群体(即非裔美国人、西班牙裔、苗族、美国原住民、索马里人、白人)的 5-7 岁儿童及其家庭(n=150)参与了这项混合方法研究。结果显示,有超重/肥胖症儿童的家庭和没有超重/肥胖症儿童的家庭的家长进行了类似的以体重和健康为重点的对话(定性主题 = 关注成长;超重/肥胖症对健康的影响;关注饮食摄入和体育锻炼;直接谈论体重、体形或体型;混合以体重和健康为重点的对话)。此外,研究结果表明,根据家庭中是否有超重/肥胖症儿童(定性主题 = 基于体重的取笑;批评自己的体重)或没有超重/肥胖症儿童(定性主题 = 体形和体型的差异是正常现象;注重示范而不是谈论),父母也会进行不同类型的以体重和健康为重点的谈话。研究结果可能有助于为公共卫生干预措施提供信息,也有助于医疗服务提供者与家长合作,在不同儿童的家庭环境中开展以体重和健康为重点的对话。
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
Stigma and Health
Stigma and Health Multiple-
CiteScore
4.70
自引率
6.70%
发文量
94
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