Changing the Home Food Environment: Parents’ Perspectives Four Years after Starting Obesity Treatment for Their Preschool Aged Child
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
3. Results
3.1. Making Changes in the Home Food Environment
3.1.1. Covert Changes
When it comes to chips, for example, he [dad] seemed to like switching entirely to fruits and berries and nuts and so on instead of having chips on Fridays… or sweets. But I felt that you cannot ban [unhealthy snacks] completely—they are children.(M83)
3.1.2. Overt Changes
Because sometimes when you give him one portion then he says “no I want more I want more!”… Then I have asked what I should do. “Well, serve him smaller portions, but serve him twice.” In the child’s mind, it’s like a habit to always have two servings.(M54)
… yes, that’s probably what’s most difficult…, having to say no to an ice cream or…, we have tried to find like, she might get to buy a magazine instead or something like that in the store. Because before it was a Kinder egg (a chocolate egg with a small toy inside) or it was an ice cream.(M6)
…then you have to choose if you want popcorn or if you want something else or if you want sweets and then we stick to our hundred grams, that’s what you get and they get to choose them [the sweets], pick what they want and that’s what it is, there’s nothing more…(M14)
But she can get angry now and then, and I understand that she may be hungry, but I usually say that “you have to wait a while”. “Now we wait a bit and see, we can do this instead”, but sometimes she does not want to wait, sometimes she just gets really angry and maybe throws some pens or something like that, you know, and just aaahhh! Or walks away and slams the door. But it blows over pretty fast, but she can, she can definitely get quite angry if I say no.(M24)
… if he serves himself food. If you do not notice that he serves himself more and he like… you could say sneaks, although it is a little difficult to sneak at a dining table… But he openly takes another serving if neither of us react.(F96)
3.1.3. Child-Directed Changes
It was the same thing when I started talking to her “well, now we will do this. Okay?” … she has made it super easy for us. But then that has also made it easier, like, when there is no nagging from her all the time, then it has been much easier to keep it [the new habit].(M5)
Sometimes you forget as an adult and just grab whatever you are used to. Then [name of daughter] can say “mom [name of dietician] said we should not take that one”.(M6)
Yes, but you have to think about that as well, what [type of food] you have at home and were you keep it, because I cannot control her all the time… And that, she says that herself “If I see it, it’s so hard to resist”. Which is insightful of her, I think. And then, after all, my mission is simply to make sure that it is out of sight.(M85)
Now he understands things in a completely different way. He’s a little older now too. He is eight now, it is possible to communicate with him. He understands the connection. So, he did not understand at first. But nowadays it’s a little easier to work with him.(M86)
It’s like the older they get, the harder it is, or maybe not harder, rather it is not possible to control in the same way. I feel that I as a parent need to give her the responsibility of how much she eats and what she does not eat and so on. When she was five years old then it was like “yes” or “no”, now it’s more “if you eat this maybe you cannot eat that…”. Today I have to help them by giving alternatives instead. That she gets, that you help her making the decisions instead of making the decisions for her, and that is a challenge in its own way.(M58)
3.2. An Ongoing Negotiation
3.2.1. Concern and Care
… when you have forbidden something. That may be why what is forbidden becomes what you want to eat later, when you have the opportunity to buy it yourself. Do you know what I mean? When they are old enough, that [the restrictions] affects them negatively instead? So, I don’t know, but that’s what time will tell us. You just hope that you are do the right thing.(M88)
We do not have to worry about anything, about his weight, or how he grows or anything like that, I can at least feel that I don’t have to keep the same focus on it. …The routines around the portions and so on is in the back of my mind.(M70)
It is very difficult sometimes … when she says that she is hungry and she has not been able to eat at school, you get a bad conscience, you do not want her to be hungry.(M6)
They have almost stopped asking for candy; first they said “Saturday sweets”, no that did not happen, then we had trail mix, that happened a few times, but that is over now… Regarding ice cream, … they get it every now and then, but not that often. “Dad, I haven’t eaten ice cream in a week.” “Well, that’s great, that is really, really good”, I answer and [they say] “no dad we have to have it”, but that does not help much. I try to do things step by step.(F33)
… because she is so old now and what is my biggest concern, or what has already started, is that she eats when I am not around. That’s why she has gained so much weight this year. She eats snacks, when she comes home from [unclear] and she can buy something to eat herself and so on.(M67)
3.2.2. Two Steps Forward, One Back
Because we treat ourselves now and then, we notice that we can fall into old habits for a period too, but then I feel that “no this is not a god thing, now we, like, have to get back to our good routines”.(M58)
3.2.3. Maintaining Everyday Balance
Well, what can be difficult, for example, when you have worked and are tired, something may have happened at work, and then it may be that you do not have the strength. “Okay do what you want!”… It has not been easy all the time.(M54)
But it is super important to dare to stay put, to have the guts to say no and stick to it [your rules] and not start negotiating or that the child starts negotiating. It will not be good. Then I think that planning is better, just to plan the meals in advance, … to have a plan before a sharp situation arise. To be prepared at all times—then you can be calm and nice and harmonious.(M59)
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Treatment, n (%) | |
---|---|
More and Less parent support program | 16 (49) |
Standard treatment | 17 (51) |
Parents | |
Age (years), mean (SD) | 41.1 (5.6) |
BMI (kg/m2), mean (SD) | 28.6 (5.6) |
Gender, woman, n (%) | 28 (84.8) |
Foreign background *, n (%) | 14 (45.2) |
Weight status **, n (%) | |
Normal weight | 12 (38.7) |
Overweight | 10 (32.3) |
Obesity | 9 (29) |
Missing values | 2 |
Highest completed education, n (%) | |
Elementary school | 1 (3.2) |
High school | 14 (45.2) |
University or college | 16 (51.6) |
Missing values | 2 |
Children | |
Age (years), mean (SD) | 9.4 (0.7) |
Gender, girls, n (%) | 14 (42.4) |
BMI z-score, mean (SD) | |
Baseline | 2.9 (0.7) |
4-year follow-up | 2.5 (0.6) |
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Nowicka, P.; Keres, J.; Ek, A.; Nordin, K.; Sandvik, P. Changing the Home Food Environment: Parents’ Perspectives Four Years after Starting Obesity Treatment for Their Preschool Aged Child. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2021, 18, 11293. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph182111293
Nowicka P, Keres J, Ek A, Nordin K, Sandvik P. Changing the Home Food Environment: Parents’ Perspectives Four Years after Starting Obesity Treatment for Their Preschool Aged Child. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2021; 18(21):11293. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph182111293
Chicago/Turabian StyleNowicka, Paulina, Johan Keres, Anna Ek, Karin Nordin, and Pernilla Sandvik. 2021. "Changing the Home Food Environment: Parents’ Perspectives Four Years after Starting Obesity Treatment for Their Preschool Aged Child" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 18, no. 21: 11293. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph182111293
APA StyleNowicka, P., Keres, J., Ek, A., Nordin, K., & Sandvik, P. (2021). Changing the Home Food Environment: Parents’ Perspectives Four Years after Starting Obesity Treatment for Their Preschool Aged Child. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 18(21), 11293. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph182111293