The Roles of Family and School Members in Influencing Children’s Eating Behaviours in China: A Narrative Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methods
2.1. Search Strategy
2.2. Study Selection
3. Results
3.1. Descriptive Information
3.2. Main Findings
- Theme 1: Social–Demographic Characteristics
- Theme 2: Parental Food Intake
- Theme 3: Family or School Members Nutritional Knowledge and Health Awareness
- Theme 4: Parents Perceptions of Their Children’s Body Weight
- Theme 5: Family Members’ Feeding Strategies
- Theme 6: Family Relationships
- Theme 7: Caregivers’ Intergenerational Differences
ID | Year | Study Design | Sample Size | Identified Theme(s) | Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 2019 | Cross-sectional | 956 preschool children aged 3-6 and their caregivers | Family members’ feeding strategies | Yuan et al. [42] |
2 | 2015 | Cross-sectional | 4553 preschoolers | Family members’ feeding strategies | Lo et al. [43] |
3 | 2019 | Cross-sectional | 1781 parents of preschool children | Social–demographic characteristics; parental perceptions of the body weights of their children | Hu et al. [32] |
4 | 2012 | Cross-sectional | 3361 rural caregivers and their children, aged 2–7 | Family or school members’ nutritional knowledge and health awareness | Zeng et al. [40] |
5 | 2014 | Cross-sectional | 11,270 fourth to sixth grade students, 11,270 parents, and 1348 teachers | Social–demographic characteristics; family or school members’ nutritional knowledge and health awareness | He et al. [33] |
6 | 2020 | Cross-sectional | 1631 children and their parents | Parents’ food intake | Tang et al. [38] |
7 | 2017 | Cross-sectional | 600 caregivers whose children aged 1–10 | Family relationships | Chao & Chang [48] |
8 | 2011 | Longitudinal | 966 mother-child pairs (children aged 3–5 at baseline) | Social–demographic characteristics | Dearth-Wesley et al. [36] |
9 | 2008 | Cross-sectional | 241 children aged 10–13 | Parents’ perceptions of their children’s body weight | Tao & Zhong, 2008 [41] |
10 | 2018 | Cross-sectional | 364 urban children aged 2–6 | Social–demographic characteristics; parental perceptions concerning the body weights of their children | Tang et al. [37] |
11 | 2018 | Cross-sectional | 18,046 children | Social–demographic characteristics | Wu [35] |
12 | 2020 | Cross-sectional | 1690 students aged 6–18 | Social–demographic characteristics | Wu et al. [34] |
13 | 2014 | Cross-sectional | 594 high school students aged 15–18 | Family relationships | Zhu et al. [47] |
14 | 2016 | Longitudinal | 5201 parent–child pairs (children’s age: 7–17) | Parents’ food intake | Dong et al. [39] |
15 | 2012 | Cross-sectional | 424 left-behind children aged 1–4 | Caregivers’ intergenerational differences | Su et al. [52] |
16 | 2008 | Qualitative | 10 children (and family) undergoing therapies for eating disorders | Family relationships | Ma [54] |
17 | 2015 | Qualitative | 26 children (21 of which were left-behind children) aged 6–12, and their caregivers | Caregivers’ intergenerational differences | Zhang et al. [53] |
18 | 2020 | Qualitative | Primary caregivers of elementary school children from 23 households in 4 remote areas of Taiwan | Caregivers’ intergenerational differences | Wang et al. [51] |
4. Discussion
4.1. Positive and Negative Aspects of Family and School Members’ Effects
4.2. Group Identity
4.3. The Importance of Indirect Social Interaction
4.4. Methodological Considerations
5. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Variable | Total-n (%) |
---|---|
Total-N | 18 |
Regions studied | |
China mainland | 14 (78%) |
Taiwan | 3 (17%) |
Hong Kong | 1 (5%) |
Study Design | |
Quantitative | |
Cross-sectional | 13 (72.1%) |
Longitudinal | 2 (11.1%) |
Qualitative | |
Multiple cases studied | 1 (5.6%) |
Food diaries and semi-structured interview | 1 (5.6%) |
Semi-structured interview | 1 (5.6%) |
Study Population | |
Pre-school age children | 6 (33%) |
School-age children | 5 (28%) |
Children of mixed ages | 6 (33%) |
Adolescents | 1 (6%) |
The type of influence on eating behaviours | |
Only parents (10 in total, 2 of whom studied mothers only) | 10 (56%) |
Caregivers | 7 (39%) |
Both parents and teachers | 1 (6%) |
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Xu, J. The Roles of Family and School Members in Influencing Children’s Eating Behaviours in China: A Narrative Review. Children 2022, 9, 315. https://doi.org/10.3390/children9030315
Xu J. The Roles of Family and School Members in Influencing Children’s Eating Behaviours in China: A Narrative Review. Children. 2022; 9(3):315. https://doi.org/10.3390/children9030315
Chicago/Turabian StyleXu, Jianlin. 2022. "The Roles of Family and School Members in Influencing Children’s Eating Behaviours in China: A Narrative Review" Children 9, no. 3: 315. https://doi.org/10.3390/children9030315
APA StyleXu, J. (2022). The Roles of Family and School Members in Influencing Children’s Eating Behaviours in China: A Narrative Review. Children, 9(3), 315. https://doi.org/10.3390/children9030315