2020
DOI: 10.1016/j.appet.2019.104558
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Influence of fathers on the feeding practices and behaviors of children: A systematic review

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Cited by 74 publications
(59 citation statements)
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“…This review builds on a 2014 narrative review on fathers' food parenting conducted by members of our research team 91 along with a recent systematic review of the topic 92 . Weaknesses previously identified in our 2014 review include a lack of longitudinal studies, small sample sizes of fathers, the relative lack of theory, a focus on white, well‐educated fathers cohabiting with mothers and the predominance of food parenting measures not validated for use with fathers 91 .…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This review builds on a 2014 narrative review on fathers' food parenting conducted by members of our research team 91 along with a recent systematic review of the topic 92 . Weaknesses previously identified in our 2014 review include a lack of longitudinal studies, small sample sizes of fathers, the relative lack of theory, a focus on white, well‐educated fathers cohabiting with mothers and the predominance of food parenting measures not validated for use with fathers 91 .…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These factors include the social-affective context ( e.g. Birch et al, 1980 ; Addessi et al, 2005 ), whether a food is easy to get ( Michela and Contento, 1986 ), parents’ feeding practices (see Larsen et al, 2015 ; Litchford et al, 2020 ; Rahill et al, 2020 for comprehensive reviews), peers’ and friends’ influence ( e.g. Salvy et al, 2012 ) and having the opportunity to choose foods ( e.g.…”
Section: On How Brain Development Maps Cognitive Development and The mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Overall, paternal feeding practices are much less widely‐studied than maternal practices (Wardle & Carnell, 2007); however, growing research suggests fathers play an important role in their children's eating practices (Khandpur, Blaine, Fisher, & Davison, 2014; Litchford, Savoie Roskos, & Wengreen, 2020). Fathers appear to be less likely than mothers to monitor and set limits with children's eating but are more likely to pressure their children to eat at mealtimes (Khandpur et al, 2014).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%