“My Tummy Tells Me” Cognitions, Barriers and Supports of Parents and School-Age Children for Appropriate Portion Sizes
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Sample
2.2. Instrument
2.3. Data Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Parent Focus Groups
3.1.1. Parents’ Attitudes toward Appropriately Sized Food Portions
3.1.2. Parents’ Perceived Barriers to Serving Appropriately Sized Food Portions
3.1.3. Parents’ Strategies for Overcoming Barriers to Serving Appropriately Sized Food Portions
3.2. Children’s Focus Groups
3.2.1. Children’s Attitudes toward Appropriately Sized Food Portions
3.2.2. Children’s Decisions on Amount to Eat
3.2.3. Children’s Perceived Barriers to Not Overeating
3.2.4. Children’s Strategies for Overcoming Barriers to Not Overeating
4. Discussion
4.1. Outcome Expectations
4.2. Self-Efficacy
4.3. Facilitation
4.4. Observational Learning
4.5. Demographic Differences
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Social Cognitive Theory Construct | Recommendations for Future Interventions Promoting Age-Appropriate Portion Sizes |
---|---|
Facilitation | Provide parents with guidelines for age-appropriate serving sizes. |
Self-efficacy | Build parent confidence in their ability to compare child intake with age-appropriate serving size recommendations and offer guidance to children when portions are too large or small. |
Outcome expectations | Expand parent views of portion control as a weight management tool rather than a weight loss method. |
Facilitation | Promote parent feeding styles that allow children to build their own self-regulation skills. |
Facilitation | Enhance parent and child knowledge of energy expenditure in exercise to enable them to balance energy intake with expenditure. |
Facilitation/Self-efficacy | Provide parents with tools and resources to help them feel confident in their ability to serve age-appropriate portions. |
Self-efficacy | Build children’s confidence in their ability to serve their own meals and regulate intake using internal hunger and satiety cues. |
Self-efficacy | Build parent confidence in teaching kids about appropriately sized portions. |
Self-efficacy | Build parent confidence in coaching children to use their internal hunger and satiety cues. |
Outcome Expectation | Expand parent perceptions of the importance of portion control to include healthy foods. |
Facilitation | Provide parents with ideas for simple and effective ways to control portion sizes and minimize overeating. |
Outcome Expectations | Enhance parent understanding of the effect of role modeling on children’s behavior now and in the future. |
Self-efficacy | Empower parents to effectively talk with their children about body image. |
Facilitation | Address cultural variations in parent feeding behaviors. |
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Eck, K.M.; Delaney, C.L.; Leary, M.P.; Famodou, O.A.; Olfert, M.D.; Shelnutt, K.P.; Byrd-Bredbenner, C. “My Tummy Tells Me” Cognitions, Barriers and Supports of Parents and School-Age Children for Appropriate Portion Sizes. Nutrients 2018, 10, 1040. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu10081040
Eck KM, Delaney CL, Leary MP, Famodou OA, Olfert MD, Shelnutt KP, Byrd-Bredbenner C. “My Tummy Tells Me” Cognitions, Barriers and Supports of Parents and School-Age Children for Appropriate Portion Sizes. Nutrients. 2018; 10(8):1040. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu10081040
Chicago/Turabian StyleEck, Kaitlyn M., Colleen L. Delaney, Miriam P. Leary, Oluremi A. Famodou, Melissa D. Olfert, Karla P. Shelnutt, and Carol Byrd-Bredbenner. 2018. "“My Tummy Tells Me” Cognitions, Barriers and Supports of Parents and School-Age Children for Appropriate Portion Sizes" Nutrients 10, no. 8: 1040. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu10081040
APA StyleEck, K. M., Delaney, C. L., Leary, M. P., Famodou, O. A., Olfert, M. D., Shelnutt, K. P., & Byrd-Bredbenner, C. (2018). “My Tummy Tells Me” Cognitions, Barriers and Supports of Parents and School-Age Children for Appropriate Portion Sizes. Nutrients, 10(8), 1040. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu10081040