6533b832fe1ef96bd129a423

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Associations between family-related factors, breakfast consumption and BMI among 10- to 12-year-old European children: the cross-sectional ENERGY-study

Maïté VerloigneMaartje M. Van StralenIlse De BourdeaudhuijEva KovacsJohannes BrugElling BereFrøydis Nordgård VikLea MaesWendy Van LippeveldeJ.f. AlviraMai J. M. ChinapawYannis ManiosNataša JanSaskia J. Te VeldeBettina Bringolf-islerBettina Bringolf-isler

subject

GerontologyMale030309 nutrition & dieteticsCross-sectional studyPsychological interventionlcsh:MedicineOverweightBody Mass IndexEating0302 clinical medicineADOLESCENTSMedicine and Health SciencesParenting stylesBALANCE-RELATED BEHAVIORS030212 general & internal medicinelcsh:ScienceChildEXCESSIVE WEIGHT-GAINCONSTRUCT-VALIDITY0303 health sciencesMultidisciplinaryParentingdigestive oral and skin physiologyEurope/dk/atira/pure/sustainabledevelopmentgoals/good_health_and_well_beingFemaleTEST-RETEST RELIABILITYFamily RelationsCHILDHOOD OBESITYmedicine.symptomChild Nutritional Physiological PhenomenaPROJECTResearch ArticleMediation (statistics)QUESTIONNAIREChildhood obesity03 medical and health sciencesSDG 3 - Good Health and Well-beingmedicineHumansObesityBreakfastbusiness.industrylcsh:RBody WeightPARENTING STYLESFeeding Behaviormedicine.diseaseObesityCross-Sectional StudiesFOOD-CONSUMPTIONlcsh:QbusinessBody mass indexDemography

description

Objective: To investigate associations of family-related factors with children's breakfast consumption and BMI-z-score and to examine whether children's breakfast consumption mediates associations between family-related factors and children's BMI-z-score. Subjects: Ten-to twelve-year-old children (n = 6374; mean age = 11.6 +/- 0.7 years, 53.2% girls, mean BMI-z-score = 0.4 +/- 1.2) and one of their parents (n = 6374; mean age = 41.4 +/- 5.3 years, 82.7% female, mean BMI = 24.5 +/- 4.2 kg/m(2)) were recruited from schools in eight European countries (Belgium, Greece, Hungary, the Netherlands, Norway, Slovenia, Spain, and Switzerland). The children self-reported their breakfast frequency per week. The body weight and height of the children were objectively measured. The parents responded to items on family factors related to breakfast (automaticity, availability, encouragement, paying attention, permissiveness, negotiating, communicating health beliefs, parental self-efficacy to address children's nagging, praising, and family breakfast frequency). Mediation analyses were performed using multi-level regression analyses (child-school-country). Results: Three of the eleven family-related variables were significantly associated with children's BMI-z-score. The family breakfast frequency was negatively associated with the BMI-z-score; permissiveness concerning skipping breakfast and negotiating about breakfast were positively associated with the BMI-z-score. Children's breakfast consumption was found to be a mediator of the two associations. All family-related variables except for negotiating, praising and communicating health beliefs, were significantly associated with children's breakfast consumption. Conclusions: Future breakfast promotion and obesity prevention interventions should focus on family-related factors including the physical home environment and parenting practices. Nevertheless, more longitudinal research and intervention studies to support these findings between family-related factors and both children's breakfast consumption and BMI-z-score are needed.

10.1371/journal.pone.0079550https://research.vumc.nl/en/publications/50e3e1d0-cca2-4c04-8053-d0956a5de125