Parental Perception of Weight Status: Influence on Children's Diet in the Gateshead Millennium Study.

OBJECTIVE:Recognising overweight and obesity is critical to prompting action, and consequently preventing and treating obesity. The present study examined the association between parental perceptions of child weight status and child's diet. METHODS:Participants were members of the Gateshead Mil...

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Main Authors: Suzana Almoosawi, Angela R Jones, Kathryn N Parkinson, Mark S Pearce, Heather Collins, Ashley J Adamson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2016-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4757535?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-5f859d36d7b444cca67772ff3c5cce3f2020-11-25T00:05:34ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032016-01-01112e014493110.1371/journal.pone.0144931Parental Perception of Weight Status: Influence on Children's Diet in the Gateshead Millennium Study.Suzana AlmoosawiAngela R JonesKathryn N ParkinsonMark S PearceHeather CollinsAshley J AdamsonOBJECTIVE:Recognising overweight and obesity is critical to prompting action, and consequently preventing and treating obesity. The present study examined the association between parental perceptions of child weight status and child's diet. METHODS:Participants were members of the Gateshead Millennium Study. Parental perception of their child's weight status was assessed using a questionnaire and compared against International Obesity Task Force cut-offs for childhood overweight and obesity when the children were aged 6-8 years old. Diet was assessed at age 6-8years old using the FAST (Food Assessment in Schools Tool) food diary method. The association between parental perception and dietary patterns as defined by Principal Components Analysis, was assessed using multivariate regression after adjustment for child's gender, child's weight status, maternal body mass index (BMI), maternal education and deprivation status. RESULTS:Of the 361 parents who provided complete data on confounders and on their perception of their child's weight status, 63 (17%) parents perceived their child as being of 'normal' weight or 'overweight' when they were actually 'overweight' or 'obese', respectively. After adjustment for confounders, parents who misperceived their child's weight had children with a lower 'healthy' dietary pattern score compared to children whose parents correctly perceived their weight (β = -0.88; 95% CI: -1.7, -0.1; P-value = 0.028). This association was found despite higher consumption of reduced sugar carbonated drinks amongst children whose parents incorrectly perceived their weight status compared to children whose parents perceived their weight correctly (52.4% vs. 33.6%; P-value = 0.005). CONCLUSIONS:In conclusion, children whose parents did not correctly perceive their weight status scored lower on the 'healthy' dietary pattern. Further research is required to define parents' diets based on their perception status and to examine if a child's or parent's diet mediates the association between parental perception and child weight.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4757535?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Suzana Almoosawi
Angela R Jones
Kathryn N Parkinson
Mark S Pearce
Heather Collins
Ashley J Adamson
spellingShingle Suzana Almoosawi
Angela R Jones
Kathryn N Parkinson
Mark S Pearce
Heather Collins
Ashley J Adamson
Parental Perception of Weight Status: Influence on Children's Diet in the Gateshead Millennium Study.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Suzana Almoosawi
Angela R Jones
Kathryn N Parkinson
Mark S Pearce
Heather Collins
Ashley J Adamson
author_sort Suzana Almoosawi
title Parental Perception of Weight Status: Influence on Children's Diet in the Gateshead Millennium Study.
title_short Parental Perception of Weight Status: Influence on Children's Diet in the Gateshead Millennium Study.
title_full Parental Perception of Weight Status: Influence on Children's Diet in the Gateshead Millennium Study.
title_fullStr Parental Perception of Weight Status: Influence on Children's Diet in the Gateshead Millennium Study.
title_full_unstemmed Parental Perception of Weight Status: Influence on Children's Diet in the Gateshead Millennium Study.
title_sort parental perception of weight status: influence on children's diet in the gateshead millennium study.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2016-01-01
description OBJECTIVE:Recognising overweight and obesity is critical to prompting action, and consequently preventing and treating obesity. The present study examined the association between parental perceptions of child weight status and child's diet. METHODS:Participants were members of the Gateshead Millennium Study. Parental perception of their child's weight status was assessed using a questionnaire and compared against International Obesity Task Force cut-offs for childhood overweight and obesity when the children were aged 6-8 years old. Diet was assessed at age 6-8years old using the FAST (Food Assessment in Schools Tool) food diary method. The association between parental perception and dietary patterns as defined by Principal Components Analysis, was assessed using multivariate regression after adjustment for child's gender, child's weight status, maternal body mass index (BMI), maternal education and deprivation status. RESULTS:Of the 361 parents who provided complete data on confounders and on their perception of their child's weight status, 63 (17%) parents perceived their child as being of 'normal' weight or 'overweight' when they were actually 'overweight' or 'obese', respectively. After adjustment for confounders, parents who misperceived their child's weight had children with a lower 'healthy' dietary pattern score compared to children whose parents correctly perceived their weight (β = -0.88; 95% CI: -1.7, -0.1; P-value = 0.028). This association was found despite higher consumption of reduced sugar carbonated drinks amongst children whose parents incorrectly perceived their weight status compared to children whose parents perceived their weight correctly (52.4% vs. 33.6%; P-value = 0.005). CONCLUSIONS:In conclusion, children whose parents did not correctly perceive their weight status scored lower on the 'healthy' dietary pattern. Further research is required to define parents' diets based on their perception status and to examine if a child's or parent's diet mediates the association between parental perception and child weight.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4757535?pdf=render
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