6533b7d6fe1ef96bd126718c

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Associations between home- and family-related factors and fruit juice and soft drink intake among 10- to 12-year old children. The ENERGY project.

Lea MaesMaïté VerloigneEva KovacsSaskia J. Te VeldeIlse De BourdeaudhuijElling BereYannis ManiosJohannes BrugJuan Miguel Fernández-alviraBettina Bringolf-islerNataša JanMai J. M. ChinapawWendy Van Lippevelde

subject

AdultMale030309 nutrition & dieteticsCross-sectional studyPsychological interventionCarbonated BeveragesSocial EnvironmentChoice BehaviorChildhood obesityBeverages03 medical and health sciencesFood Preferences0302 clinical medicineEnvironmental healthSurveys and QuestionnairesmedicineHumans030212 general & internal medicineObesityParent-Child RelationsChildGeneral Psychology0303 health sciencesNutrition and DieteticsParentingbusiness.industryMultilevel modelSocial environmentFeeding BehaviorMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseEuropeCross-Sectional StudiesFruitMultilevel AnalysisRegression AnalysisFruit juiceFemalemedicine.symptomSoft drinkbusinessWeight gain

description

The aim of this study is to investigate associations of family-related factors with children's fruit drink/juice and soft drink consumption. A cross-sectional survey among 10- to 12-year-old children and their parents in eight European countries was conducted to gather this data. Key variables of interest were children's self-reported fruit drink/juice and soft drink intake per day (outcome) and family-related factors (based on parents' report) related to these two behaviors (modeling, automaticity, availability, monitoring, permissiveness, negotiating, communicating health beliefs, avoid negative modeling, self-efficacy, rewarding, and family consumption). 7915 Children (52% girls; mean age=11.7 ± 0.8 years) and 6512 parents (83% women; mean age=41.4 ± 5.3 years) completed the questionnaire. Multilevel regression analyses were used to examine the aforementioned associations. Three of the 11 family-related factors (modeling, availability, and family consumption) were positively associated with children's fruit drink/juice and soft drink intake. Additionally, three family-related factors (permissiveness, monitoring, and self-efficacy) were solely associated with soft drink intake and one family-related factor (communicating health beliefs) was related to fruit drink/juice intake. Future interventions targeting children's fruit drink/juice and soft drink intake should focus on the home environment, parents and their practices, especially on parents' fruit drink/juice and soft drink intake and availability of these beverages at home.

10.1016/j.appet.2012.10.019https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/23154218