Picky Eating in Children: A Scoping Review to Examine Its Intrinsic and Extrinsic Features and How They Relate to Identification
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Stage 1: Identify the Research Questions
- What are the intrinsic features of paediatric picky eaters? (e.g., the child’s personality);
- What are the extrinsic features of paediatric picky eaters? (e.g., others in the child’s environment such as parents);
- What tools or methods have been used to identify paediatric picky eaters?
- What is the impact of picky eating on others around them (i.e., extrinsic impacts)?
2.2. Stage 2: Identifying Relevant Studies
2.3. Stage 3: Study Selection
- Children aged 2–10 years (or families/caregivers of these children);
- Studies with a focus and definition of paediatric picky eating or other similar labels including fussy eating/choosy eating/faddy eating/selective eating or food fussiness;
- Interventions of picky eating focused on what impacts behaviours.
2.4. Stage 4: Charting the Data
2.5. Stage 5: Collating, Summarising and Reporting Results
3. Results
3.1. Study Characteristics
3.2. Assessments Used to Identify Picky Eating
3.3. Assessment Tools Used to Measure Environmental Features
3.4. Intrinsic Assessments-Those That Are Specific to the Child
3.5. The Child Who Is a Picky Eater: Presentation
3.6. The Child Who Is a Picky Eater: Intrinsic Features
3.7. Paediatric Picky Eating–Extrinsic Features
3.8. Parenting Styles/Behaviours
3.9. Extrinsic Influences That Decrease Likelihood of Picky Eating
3.10. Impact of Picky Eating on Others
4. Discussion
5. Limitations
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Assessment Name | Brief Description | Study |
---|---|---|
Children’s Eating Behaviour Questionnaire (CEBQ): food fussiness subscale | Six questions thought to relate to food pickiness including: My child enjoys tasting new food; My child enjoys a wide variety of food; My child is interested in tasting food tasted before; My child refuses new foods at first; My child decides that she/he doesn’t like food, even without tasting it; My child is difficult to please with meal. Parents respond to each question on a 5-point scale (1 = never, 5 = always) and responses are averaged | [21,22,27,30,32,35,37,42,44,54,55,60,65,69,72] |
Children’s Eating Behaviour Questionnaire (CEBQ) | A 35 itemed assessment thought to measure children eating behaviours. It has eight subscales: food responsiveness; good fussiness (as above); emotional overeating; enjoyment of food; desire to drink; satiety-responsiveness; slowness in eating and emotional undereating. Parents respond to each question on a 5-point scale (1 = never, 5 = always) and responses are averaged. | [29,33,45,53,61,80,82,90] |
One single study specific question | For example, ‘is your child a picky eater’ or ‘is your child choosy about food’. | [29,33,45,53,61,80,82,90] |
Study specific structured interview | Varied | [31,36,41] |
Behaviour checklist: two items | These two items are thought to assess picky eating: these being lack of appetite and food fussiness. These items were scored 1–3 and then averaged. | [81] |
Colorado Children’s Temperament Inventor: reaction to food subscale | This subscale asked the mother to rate her child on a series of 5 items about the child’s typical responses to food and includes items common across picky-eating scale. | [62] |
Behavioural Paediatric Feeding Assessment Scale (BPFAS): frequency subscale | This subscale is used to measure food avoidance. Parents complete thirty-five items on a five-point Likert scale. | [29] |
Preschool Age Psychiatric Assessment (PAPA) | A semi-structured psychiatric interview for parents including questions about child’s food preferences and appetite over previous three months, including restriction of feeds and whether food selectivity impairs functioning. | [66,79] |
Child Behaviour Checklist: picky eating subscale | Uses two questions from the 99 itemed parent report questionnaire: ‘does not eat well’ and ‘refuses to eat’ on a three-point Likert scale | [43,74] |
Mealtime assessment survey (MAS): singular picky eating question | Contains 43 items about toddler mealtime behaviours and 25 items focused on parent mealtime strategies; within the study children were categorised as picky or non-picky by one question: ‘is your child a picky eater’. | [38] |
Brief Assessment of Mealtime Behaviour in Children (BAMBIC): subscale | 10-item parent report questionnaire on mealtime behaviour. Raw subscale scores for Limited Variety, Food Refusal, and Disruptive Behaviour were included as variables in this study. | [47] |
Food Preference Questionnaire for children (FPQ) | Caregivers rate their child’s liking for 75 commonly consumed individual foods from six food groups. Items are scored on a five-point Likert scale or a never tried option which is scored as a missing response. | [22] |
Child-reported Food Preference Questionnaire (C-FPQ) (based on the FPQ)In pilot phase for Australian children aged 7–12 years old | Child’s food preferences to core foods: Fruits, vegetables, protein-rich (meat and alternatives, breads, etc.), carbohydrate-rich (cereals, etc.), dairy and non-core sweet and savory foods and beverages. Measured on a 5-point Likert scale. | [88] |
Picky eating questionnaire (PEQ) In pilot phase for Australian children aged 7–12 years old | Measures primary caregiver’s perception of their child’s pickiness to core foods: fruits; vegetables; meat and alternatives; breads and cereals; dairy. Measured on a 5-point Likert scale. | [88] |
Oregon Research Institute Child Eating Behaviour Inventory (ORI-CEBI) | An items pool addressing child eating behaviours outcome of picky eating behaviour was assessed using certain subscales limited variety, preparation for food preparation and food refusals. | [16,57,64] |
Feature Measured | Assessment Name | Study |
---|---|---|
Maternal depressive symptoms | Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ) | [62] |
Brief Symptom Inventory (BSI) | [69] | |
Hopkins Symptom Checklist (SCL-25) | [81] | |
Parents different feeding styles and feeding practices | Caregiver’s Feeding Styles Questionnaire (CFSQ) | [33,37,53] |
Child Feeding Questionnaire | [70] | |
Comprehensive Feeding Practices Questionnaire (CFPQ) | [64] | |
Stanford feeding questionnaire | [67] | |
Feeding Practices and Structure Questionaire-2 (FPSQ) | [34,42,60,65] | |
Family mealtime characteristics | Family Ritual Questionnaire | [64] |
Mealtime Assessment Survey | [52] | |
Maternal perceptions of parent-child interaction | Parenting Stress Index (short form) | [62] |
Eating environment including parent feeding practices | Comprehensive feeding practices questionnaire | [23] |
Feeding practices and structures questionnaire (FPSQ) | [20] | |
Parental neophobia | Food Neophobia Scale (FNS) | [32] |
Health and lifestyle including diet | Study specific questionnaire | [32] |
Parent modelling during a mealtime | Parental Modelling of Eating Behaviours–Observational coding scheme (PARM-O) (study specific) | [49] |
General parenting style | Parenting Styles and Dimensions Questionnaire (PSDQ) | [38] |
Assessment Tool | Brief Description | Study |
---|---|---|
Stanford feeding questionnaire | Parental report that measures child feeding behaviours such as limited variety of food, accepts new foods readily, strong likes/dislikes. | [67] |
Children’s Behaviour Questionnaire short form | In this study was used to assess difficult temperament by using certain subscales | [35] |
Child Mealtime Coding Scheme (CMCS) | Used to generate an overall index of how easy or difficult the child was to feed, ranging from 1 (easy; e.g., usually autonomous feeder, eats well with little protest) to 5 (difficult; e.g., much resistance to offers of food, refusal to eat). | [77] |
Child Behaviour Checklist: full form | Provides information on eight empirically based syndromes: emotional reactivity, anxious/depressed, somatic complaints, withdrawn, sleep problems, attention problems, and aggressive behaviour. | [43,47,79,81] |
Emotionality, Activity, Shyness and Sociability Temperament Survey (EAS) | Measures childhood temperament using 20 itemed survey. | [81] |
Repetitive Behaviour Scale–Revised | A 43-item caregiver report measure that assesses restricted and repetitive behaviours in children. | [47] |
Denver Developmental Screening Test 2 | A tool to assess screen children’s development in four areas of functioning: fine motor-adaptive, gross motor, personal-social, and language skills. | [36] |
Children’s Dietary Questionnaire (CDQ) | A parental report that assesses the child’s intake patterns. | [72] |
Food Frequency Questionnaire (FFQ) | Assesses children’s food intake based on the frequency and type of food consumed over the past 4 weeks. | [47,74,80] |
Short Sensory Profile (SSP) | Measures a child’s sensory responses including sensitivity to taste and processing tactile stimuli. | [47,51] |
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Chilman, L.; Kennedy-Behr, A.; Frakking, T.; Swanepoel, L.; Verdonck, M. Picky Eating in Children: A Scoping Review to Examine Its Intrinsic and Extrinsic Features and How They Relate to Identification. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2021, 18, 9067. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18179067
Chilman L, Kennedy-Behr A, Frakking T, Swanepoel L, Verdonck M. Picky Eating in Children: A Scoping Review to Examine Its Intrinsic and Extrinsic Features and How They Relate to Identification. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2021; 18(17):9067. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18179067
Chicago/Turabian StyleChilman, Laine, Ann Kennedy-Behr, Thuy Frakking, Libby Swanepoel, and Michele Verdonck. 2021. "Picky Eating in Children: A Scoping Review to Examine Its Intrinsic and Extrinsic Features and How They Relate to Identification" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 18, no. 17: 9067. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18179067
APA StyleChilman, L., Kennedy-Behr, A., Frakking, T., Swanepoel, L., & Verdonck, M. (2021). Picky Eating in Children: A Scoping Review to Examine Its Intrinsic and Extrinsic Features and How They Relate to Identification. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 18(17), 9067. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18179067