Like parent, like child? Dietary resemblance in families

Abstract Background Studies investigating dietary resemblance between parents and their children have gained mixed results, and the resemblance seems to vary across nutrients, foods, dietary-assessment tools used, and parent-child pairs. We investigated parent-child dietary resemblance using a novel...

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Main Authors: Henna Vepsäläinen, Jaakko Nevalainen, Mikael Fogelholm, Liisa Korkalo, Eva Roos, Carola Ray, Maijaliisa Erkkola, on behalf of the DAGIS consortium group
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2018-07-01
Series:International Journal of Behavioral Nutrition and Physical Activity
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12966-018-0693-1
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spelling doaj-fdf753fdc3974d20a1c751c477351ba72020-11-24T22:10:05ZengBMCInternational Journal of Behavioral Nutrition and Physical Activity1479-58682018-07-0115111110.1186/s12966-018-0693-1Like parent, like child? Dietary resemblance in familiesHenna Vepsäläinen0Jaakko Nevalainen1Mikael Fogelholm2Liisa Korkalo3Eva Roos4Carola Ray5Maijaliisa Erkkola6on behalf of the DAGIS consortium groupDepartment of Food and Nutrition, University of HelsinkiHealth Sciences/Faculty of Social Sciences, University of TampereDepartment of Food and Nutrition, University of HelsinkiDepartment of Food and Nutrition, University of HelsinkiDepartment of Food and Nutrition, University of HelsinkiFolkhälsan Research CenterDepartment of Food and Nutrition, University of HelsinkiAbstract Background Studies investigating dietary resemblance between parents and their children have gained mixed results, and the resemblance seems to vary across nutrients, foods, dietary-assessment tools used, and parent-child pairs. We investigated parent-child dietary resemblance using a novel approach in applying statistical analysis, which allowed the comparison of ‘whole-diet’ between parents and their children. Additionally, we sought to establish whether sociodemographic factors or family meals were associated with dietary resemblance and whether parent-child dietary resemblance was dependent on the parent providing food consumption data on behalf of the child (father or mother, “the respondent”). Methods The DAGIS study investigated health behaviors among Finnish preschoolers using a cross-sectional design. One parent filled in a food frequency questionnaire (FFQ) measuring the child’s food consumption outside preschool hours during the last week. In addition, we instructed both parents or legal guardians, should the child have two, to fill in a similar FFQ regarding their own food use. Parents also reported their educational level, the number of children living in the same household, and the number of family meals. As a measure of dietary resemblance between a parent and a child, we computed Spearman correlations ranging mostly from no resemblance (0) to complete resemblance (+ 1) between parent-child pairs over the ‘whole-diet’ (excluding preschool hours). These resemblance measures were further investigated using linear mixed models. Results We obtained 665 father-child and 798 mother-child resemblance measures. Mother-child resemblance was on average 0.57 and stronger than father-child resemblance (0.50, p < 0.0001), which was explained by a parent-respondent interaction: the diet of the child resembled more the diet of the parent who provided food consumption data for the child. In univariate models, father- and mother-reported number of family meals were positively associated with father-child and mother-child resemblances. Mother-reported number of family meals was positively associated with mother-child resemblance in a full model. Conclusions The diet of the child seems to resemble more the diet of the parent responsible for the reporting of food consumption. Studies should report who provided the food consumption data for the child and take this into account in analyses, since reporter-bias can influence the results.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12966-018-0693-1Dietary similarityDietary concordanceFamilial aggregationWhole dietFamiliesRole modeling
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Henna Vepsäläinen
Jaakko Nevalainen
Mikael Fogelholm
Liisa Korkalo
Eva Roos
Carola Ray
Maijaliisa Erkkola
on behalf of the DAGIS consortium group
spellingShingle Henna Vepsäläinen
Jaakko Nevalainen
Mikael Fogelholm
Liisa Korkalo
Eva Roos
Carola Ray
Maijaliisa Erkkola
on behalf of the DAGIS consortium group
Like parent, like child? Dietary resemblance in families
International Journal of Behavioral Nutrition and Physical Activity
Dietary similarity
Dietary concordance
Familial aggregation
Whole diet
Families
Role modeling
author_facet Henna Vepsäläinen
Jaakko Nevalainen
Mikael Fogelholm
Liisa Korkalo
Eva Roos
Carola Ray
Maijaliisa Erkkola
on behalf of the DAGIS consortium group
author_sort Henna Vepsäläinen
title Like parent, like child? Dietary resemblance in families
title_short Like parent, like child? Dietary resemblance in families
title_full Like parent, like child? Dietary resemblance in families
title_fullStr Like parent, like child? Dietary resemblance in families
title_full_unstemmed Like parent, like child? Dietary resemblance in families
title_sort like parent, like child? dietary resemblance in families
publisher BMC
series International Journal of Behavioral Nutrition and Physical Activity
issn 1479-5868
publishDate 2018-07-01
description Abstract Background Studies investigating dietary resemblance between parents and their children have gained mixed results, and the resemblance seems to vary across nutrients, foods, dietary-assessment tools used, and parent-child pairs. We investigated parent-child dietary resemblance using a novel approach in applying statistical analysis, which allowed the comparison of ‘whole-diet’ between parents and their children. Additionally, we sought to establish whether sociodemographic factors or family meals were associated with dietary resemblance and whether parent-child dietary resemblance was dependent on the parent providing food consumption data on behalf of the child (father or mother, “the respondent”). Methods The DAGIS study investigated health behaviors among Finnish preschoolers using a cross-sectional design. One parent filled in a food frequency questionnaire (FFQ) measuring the child’s food consumption outside preschool hours during the last week. In addition, we instructed both parents or legal guardians, should the child have two, to fill in a similar FFQ regarding their own food use. Parents also reported their educational level, the number of children living in the same household, and the number of family meals. As a measure of dietary resemblance between a parent and a child, we computed Spearman correlations ranging mostly from no resemblance (0) to complete resemblance (+ 1) between parent-child pairs over the ‘whole-diet’ (excluding preschool hours). These resemblance measures were further investigated using linear mixed models. Results We obtained 665 father-child and 798 mother-child resemblance measures. Mother-child resemblance was on average 0.57 and stronger than father-child resemblance (0.50, p < 0.0001), which was explained by a parent-respondent interaction: the diet of the child resembled more the diet of the parent who provided food consumption data for the child. In univariate models, father- and mother-reported number of family meals were positively associated with father-child and mother-child resemblances. Mother-reported number of family meals was positively associated with mother-child resemblance in a full model. Conclusions The diet of the child seems to resemble more the diet of the parent responsible for the reporting of food consumption. Studies should report who provided the food consumption data for the child and take this into account in analyses, since reporter-bias can influence the results.
topic Dietary similarity
Dietary concordance
Familial aggregation
Whole diet
Families
Role modeling
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12966-018-0693-1
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