2017
DOI: 10.3945/ajcn.117.156448
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Testing the direction of effects between child body composition and restrictive feeding practices: results from a population-based cohort

Abstract: Background: Parental restrictive feeding (i.e., limiting food intake of children) has been linked to childhood overweight. However, the directionality of the causal pathway remains unknown. Objective: The objectives of this study were to examine the bidirectional association of maternal restrictive feeding with children's weight and body composition across childhood and to explore a possible mediating role of maternal concern about child weight. Design: Data were available for 4689 mother-child dyads participa… Show more

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Cited by 88 publications
(58 citation statements)
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References 41 publications
(59 reference statements)
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“…In the research on eating and weight in childhood, this can be helped by measuring general constructs (such as intrusive parenting, negative control, or pressure to eat) and using two or more measuring occasions that are separated by no more than about 3 years . At times, adjustments to measures are needed across ages, or additional measures included . In developmental research, cross‐lagged designs have been used over longer periods .…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 2 more Smart Citations
“…In the research on eating and weight in childhood, this can be helped by measuring general constructs (such as intrusive parenting, negative control, or pressure to eat) and using two or more measuring occasions that are separated by no more than about 3 years . At times, adjustments to measures are needed across ages, or additional measures included . In developmental research, cross‐lagged designs have been used over longer periods .…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Additionally, instead of bidirectional processes or parent influence processes, other research points to mechanisms where parents respond to the child's weight, so that feeding practices are in response to the parent's concerns about the child's BMI or appetite, rather than BMI being influenced by feeding practices. 272,[283][284][285][286][287] Finally, there are findings of no evidence linking BMI/weight with parent feeding practices. 288,289 When authors have attempted to integrate the mixed set of findings about links between parenting and children's weight, 271 they generally fail to find systematic patterns.…”
Section: Bidirectional and Transactional Influence Processesmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…This reduced ability to respond to internal signals of hunger and satiety has been associated with increased weight in childhood [64-66]. More recent data indicates these associations between parental child-feeding practices and child’s weight may be bidirectional, meaning that the feeding practices could influence child’s weight, but they also could be a reaction to the child’s weight (e.g., parents pressure imposed on a child to eat more often in reaction to a child’s low weight) [56, 67]. …”
Section: Formation and Development Of Eating Behavioursmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While the incidence of early rapid weight gain is evident in both breastfed and formula‐fed infants, it has been argued that bottle feeding imparts greater risks than breastfeeding because it yields more control to the mothers than to the infants and that the more controlling, less responsive, and less skilled the mother, the greater the likelihood she will interfere with or override the self‐regulatory abilities of her infant during bottle feeding . While mothers indeed vary in feeding styles and in how responsive they are to their infant's signals of hunger and satiety, the evidence that the dyadic interaction is unidirectional and that such variation in feeding styles causes early weight gain is equivocal …”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%