Knowing Is Not Doing: A Qualitative Study of Parental Views on Family Beverage Choice
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Design and Setting
2.2. Participants
2.3. Interviewer Training
2.4. Data Collection
2.5. Survey
2.6. Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Participant Characteristics and Response Rate
3.2. Participant Terminology
3.3. What Families Are “Supposed” to Drink and Why
3.4. Reported Sugary Drink Consumption
3.5. Factors Influencing Sugary Drink Consumption
3.6. Barriers to Water Consumption
3.7. Intervention Preferences
4. Discussion
4.1. Limitations
4.2. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Characteristic | N/% for Categorical Variables, Mean (sd) for Continuous Variables |
---|---|
Female Sex | 38 (97%) |
Age (years) | 31.5 (6.0) |
Race a | |
White | 18 (46%) |
Black or African American | 11 (28%) |
Other or Prefer not to Say | 10 (26%) |
Ethnicity a | |
Hispanic | 13 (33%) |
Non-Hispanic | 24 (62%) |
Other or Prefer not to Say | 2 (5%) |
Marital Status | |
Married | 20 (51%) |
Single | 16 (41%) |
Separated | 3 (8%) |
Educational Level | |
Less than high school | 3 (8%) |
High school or GED | 14 (36%) |
Some College or 2-year Degree | 17 (44%) |
4-year college degree or higher | 3 (8%) |
Prefer not to Say | 2 (5%) |
Domain | Theme | Quotes from Participants |
---|---|---|
What Families are “Supposed” to Drink, and Why | Sugary drinks should be consumed less because they are unhealthy | General knowledge and beliefs: “What I heard before form my doctor is pretty much saying that it’s not as good. Especially instead of doing sodas and juices like Kool-Aid, do water....” (011-HISP) “The way I was raised was it’s terrible for you. Stay away from it. It’s no good for your teeth. It’s no good for your body...” (2010-NHW) “That in excess, it may have adverse effects on their health and wellness, weight gain, diabetes, their access to other issues regarding their health.” (002-AA) “That sugary drinks are not good for you… sugary drinks are not healthy, so different types of medical problems, high blood pressure, diabetes, things that they associate it with.” (025-AA) Intervention preferences relevant to this theme: App: “People with diabetes and stuff like that can’t eat, drink sugary stuff. I just wanna know what kind of drinks out there. Some suggestions, ‘cause that will help me out a lot, and I could change my whole grocery list up.” (2014-NHW) |
Water should be consumed more because it is healthy | General knowledge and beliefs: “...Water is life... It’s no other chemical in there. Water is clear. It won’t mess you up. Water is like, it will clean your insides out.” (015-HISP) “Pretty much all my life, people just say it’s good for you and your body ’cause you need water to really survive so you don’t get dehydrated.” (014-AA) “That it’s essential. It’s recommended for better health and management for them.” (002-AA) “It’s really healthy for them to drink water, helps with keeping them from being dehydrated, and several other parts of their body, staying at the full function and that’s about it.” (010-NHW) Intervention preferences relevant to this theme: App: “It would be nice to sit and have a reminder tell me, ‘Hey, it’s time for you to drink a bottle of water. You really need one.’ That’s gonna stop me in my tracks and help me stop and say, ‘Okay.” (2010-NHW) Toolkit: “It would be very helpful. I’d actually enjoy the fact that my doctor’s actually trying to help with my child’s health as far as at home and not just her doctor’s visits.” (014-NHW) | |
Factors Influencing Sugary Drink Consumption | Sugary drinks taste better than water | General knowledge and beliefs: “The fact that it tastes good. It’s got flavor to it. Tastes like juice. It goes down easier. It’s sweet.” (028-NHW) “I honestly don’t know why it’s so easy for the kids to pick a sugary drink, versus just grabbin’ a cup and gettin’ some water. I think because sugary drinks are—they have color to them, and they have a flavor to it. Kids like stuff that has a flavor too.” (026-AA) “[water] has no flavor to it, so you get bored. You wanna have a taste in your mouth, and so teas or any other sugary drinks are more desirable for the taste palate, for us at least.” (022-NHW) “The preference for me, I like the water taste better, but my kids like—they like the sugary drinks. When they’re drinking water—it’s a little bit harder to get them to drink the water or juice. They want a soda. They want that bubbly, that fizz in their mouth type sugary drink.” (2003-NHW) Intervention Preferences Related to this Theme: Toolkit: “I would gladly accept. I would do anything to try to keep on the water path….It’s just finding something that can keep stimulating it, to drink it. Being able to infuse it with different fruits to get a different flavor every day, that would help. (025-AA) |
Sugary drinks are more affordable and available than water | General knowledge and beliefs: “Usually it’s more cheaper than it would be regular bottled water, and it would be more convenient like at the gas station, like if we go down the road to get a soda versus a water, because of the cost.” (022-NHW) “Well, one, it comes on my WIC. The fruit juice. I get ‘em for free. They do drink a lot of those, and usually they’re cheaper than buying the waters and stuff from the store.” (019-AA) “Oh, my kids get more of their sugary content from school, so during school, the chocolate milk more so. I do know that they give—I think they give—the juice I think is 100% juice, but the chocolate milk… and then my older kids, because they have access to vending machines and stuff like that, so they can get their major sugar access from there.” (025-AA) “It’s convenience. It’s not often, but it’s convenience. If we don’t have nothin’ to drink in the refrigerator, it’s easier. I literally live right behind [gas station] *, across from the hospital in [town] *. It’s easy just to run to [gas station] *, grab two two-liters.” (2010-NHW) | |
Sugary drinks are used as rewards for good behavior or to engage kids with meals | General knowledge and beliefs: “My son, if he wants a soda, he has to pick up his room to get a soda, ‘cause they are not allowed to have a bunch of sodas.” (027-NHW) “Well, particularly my daughters, they’re really picky eaters, and having something good to drink… they’ll be more interested in eating a pasta… they’re picky, I mean, picky. So I say, “You guys can have a little bit of soda,” and they get excited.” (005-HISP) “Yeah, I would rather have a soda to go with my french fries and burger, instead of some water.” (2011-AA) Intervention preferences relevant to this theme: Toolkit: “ I will be interested in knowing how it looks and how they did it and I think it will be nice. Also, it’s motivating because the kids, when they see something new or like a new cup and stuff like that, they feel more motivated. They just want to drink from that. It would be interesting.” (2012-HISP)” | |
Social and/or family influences promote sugary drink intake, including competing priorities as a busy parent | General knowledge and beliefs: “For my kids, it makes it harder for them to drink water when they see me not drinking water too.” (001-HISP) “Well if we’re not at home and we’re at someone else’s house, or if we’re somewhere like at a birthday party or something. We went to birthday parties at a park before with kids. Parents bring…we haven’t took our own drink to have. They’ll drink whatever is there, available for them to wash down their food with.” (024-NHW) “I guess sometimes when they see other kids drinking other things, they don’t wanna drink water. That may make it a little harder. They wanna drink what the other kids are drinkin’.” (030-NHW) “It’s easy to let what we drink become white sound in the background for the other things that go on” (022-NHW) Intervention preferences relevant to this theme: App: “That’s the biggest thing, is I think the app would give him an incentive. It shows him he has something to work towards, to do better, and you get rewarded for it.” (024-NHW) App (push notifications): “Maybe like once a day, or give you the ability to change it. ‘Cause I know initially we need more constant reminders, where as it became second nature and I used it more frequently, I wouldn’t need as many reminders.” (003-AA) IVR calls: “I guess it would have to make sure it states that this is what it’s for, in relation to the drink process, make sure it state that within the first fifteen seconds that we’re on the phone. That way I know, ’cause with everything going on, I’m getting a whole lot of spam calls, so a lot of times, when you hear automated voice, you’re like, “Oh, this is a scam, gonna hang up now.” (2011-AA) IVR calls: “Yes, I would probably stay on the phone, and it would probably change some of the behaviors and some of the drink choices that I would probably make for the rest of that day.” (022-NHW) | |
Barriers to Water Consumption | Water causes unpleasant physical effects | General knowledge and beliefs: “I know with myself, it causes more heartburn and indigestion to drink water.” (010- NHW) “I’m not a big fan of water… It makes my stomach hurt.” (2001-NHW) |
Tap water is unsafe to drink | General knowledge and beliefs: “I believe they should drink filtered water or bottled water, because I believe it’s cleaner than tap water would be.” (001-HISP) “I personally give my children bottled water. I feel like it’s better, more safer than just the tap.” (023-HISP) |
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Newman, C.M.; Zoellner, J.; Schwartz, M.B.; Peña, J.; Wiseman, K.D.; Skelton, J.A.; Shin, T.M.; Lewis, K.H. Knowing Is Not Doing: A Qualitative Study of Parental Views on Family Beverage Choice. Nutrients 2023, 15, 2665. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu15122665
Newman CM, Zoellner J, Schwartz MB, Peña J, Wiseman KD, Skelton JA, Shin TM, Lewis KH. Knowing Is Not Doing: A Qualitative Study of Parental Views on Family Beverage Choice. Nutrients. 2023; 15(12):2665. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu15122665
Chicago/Turabian StyleNewman, Chelsea M., Jamie Zoellner, Marlene B. Schwartz, Joseph Peña, Kimberly D. Wiseman, Joseph A. Skelton, Tiffany M. Shin, and Kristina H. Lewis. 2023. "Knowing Is Not Doing: A Qualitative Study of Parental Views on Family Beverage Choice" Nutrients 15, no. 12: 2665. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu15122665
APA StyleNewman, C. M., Zoellner, J., Schwartz, M. B., Peña, J., Wiseman, K. D., Skelton, J. A., Shin, T. M., & Lewis, K. H. (2023). Knowing Is Not Doing: A Qualitative Study of Parental Views on Family Beverage Choice. Nutrients, 15(12), 2665. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu15122665