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Associations between parental food choice motives, health-promoting feeding practices, and infants' fruit and vegetable intakes : the Food4toddlers study

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Abstract
Background: Parents influence their infants' diets and are the providers of healthy foods such as fruit and vegetables. Parental motives can influence infant's diets directly or through parental feeding practices. Objective: This study aimed to assess the associations between parental food choice motives and infants' fruit and vegetable intakes and to examine whether parental feeding practices mediated these associations. Design: A total of 298 parents participated in the Norwegian Food4toddlers study. Before the child's first birthday (mean age = 10.9 months), the parents completed an online baseline questionnaire. Five parental food choice motives were assessed: health, convenience, sensory appeal, price, and familiarity. Infants' fruit and vegetable intakes and three health-promoting feeding practices were also assessed. For each food choice motive and its relation to fruit or vegetable intake, three single mediation models were conducted. Mediation effects were examined using MacKinnon's product of coefficients procedure, and bootstrap confidence intervals (CIs) were used for inferential testing. Results: Higher scores on the motive of health were positively associated with infants' vegetable intake (tau = 0.394, P < 0.001). No other significant associations were found between food choice motives and fruit or vegetable intake. The feeding practice of shaping a healthy environment mediated the relationships between health motive and both fruit (alpha beta = 0.067, CI: 0.001-0.146) and vegetable (alpha beta = 0.105, CI: 0.042-0.186) intakes. The feeding practice of encouraging balance and variety mediated the relationships between health motive and vegetable (alpha beta = 0.085, CI: 0.030-0.150) intake and between sensory appeal motive and vegetable intake (alpha beta = 0.047, CI: 0.005-0.103). Conclusion: High levels of parental health motive are associated with higher infant vegetable intake. Our study contributes to understand the structure of parental feeding behaviors that may have implication for nutrition interventions targeting parents.
Keywords
PRACTICES QUESTIONNAIRE, DIETARY PATTERNS, CONSUMPTION, CHILDREN, PRESCHOOLERS, VALIDATION, CONSTRUCTS, MEDIATION, BEHAVIOR, QUALITY, infant, healthy food intake, mediation, diet

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MLA
Roed, Margrethe, et al. “Associations between Parental Food Choice Motives, Health-Promoting Feeding Practices, and Infants’ Fruit and Vegetable Intakes : The Food4toddlers Study.” FOOD & NUTRITION RESEARCH, vol. 64, 2019, doi:10.29219/fnr.v64.3730.
APA
Roed, M., Vik, F. N., Hillesund, E. R., Van Lippevelde, W., & Overby, N. C. (2019). Associations between parental food choice motives, health-promoting feeding practices, and infants’ fruit and vegetable intakes : the Food4toddlers study. FOOD & NUTRITION RESEARCH, 64. https://doi.org/10.29219/fnr.v64.3730
Chicago author-date
Roed, Margrethe, Froydis Nordgard Vik, Elisabet Rudjord Hillesund, Wendy Van Lippevelde, and Nina Cecilie Overby. 2019. “Associations between Parental Food Choice Motives, Health-Promoting Feeding Practices, and Infants’ Fruit and Vegetable Intakes : The Food4toddlers Study.” FOOD & NUTRITION RESEARCH 64. https://doi.org/10.29219/fnr.v64.3730.
Chicago author-date (all authors)
Roed, Margrethe, Froydis Nordgard Vik, Elisabet Rudjord Hillesund, Wendy Van Lippevelde, and Nina Cecilie Overby. 2019. “Associations between Parental Food Choice Motives, Health-Promoting Feeding Practices, and Infants’ Fruit and Vegetable Intakes : The Food4toddlers Study.” FOOD & NUTRITION RESEARCH 64. doi:10.29219/fnr.v64.3730.
Vancouver
1.
Roed M, Vik FN, Hillesund ER, Van Lippevelde W, Overby NC. Associations between parental food choice motives, health-promoting feeding practices, and infants’ fruit and vegetable intakes : the Food4toddlers study. FOOD & NUTRITION RESEARCH. 2019;64.
IEEE
[1]
M. Roed, F. N. Vik, E. R. Hillesund, W. Van Lippevelde, and N. C. Overby, “Associations between parental food choice motives, health-promoting feeding practices, and infants’ fruit and vegetable intakes : the Food4toddlers study,” FOOD & NUTRITION RESEARCH, vol. 64, 2019.
@article{8696423,
  abstract     = {{Background: Parents influence their infants' diets and are the providers of healthy foods such as fruit and vegetables. Parental motives can influence infant's diets directly or through parental feeding practices. Objective: This study aimed to assess the associations between parental food choice motives and infants' fruit and vegetable intakes and to examine whether parental feeding practices mediated these associations. Design: A total of 298 parents participated in the Norwegian Food4toddlers study. Before the child's first birthday (mean age = 10.9 months), the parents completed an online baseline questionnaire. Five parental food choice motives were assessed: health, convenience, sensory appeal, price, and familiarity. Infants' fruit and vegetable intakes and three health-promoting feeding practices were also assessed. For each food choice motive and its relation to fruit or vegetable intake, three single mediation models were conducted. Mediation effects were examined using MacKinnon's product of coefficients procedure, and bootstrap confidence intervals (CIs) were used for inferential testing. Results: Higher scores on the motive of health were positively associated with infants' vegetable intake (tau = 0.394, P < 0.001). No other significant associations were found between food choice motives and fruit or vegetable intake. The feeding practice of shaping a healthy environment mediated the relationships between health motive and both fruit (alpha beta = 0.067, CI: 0.001-0.146) and vegetable (alpha beta = 0.105, CI: 0.042-0.186) intakes. The feeding practice of encouraging balance and variety mediated the relationships between health motive and vegetable (alpha beta = 0.085, CI: 0.030-0.150) intake and between sensory appeal motive and vegetable intake (alpha beta = 0.047, CI: 0.005-0.103). Conclusion: High levels of parental health motive are associated with higher infant vegetable intake. Our study contributes to understand the structure of parental feeding behaviors that may have implication for nutrition interventions targeting parents.}},
  articleno    = {{3730}},
  author       = {{Roed, Margrethe and Vik, Froydis Nordgard and Hillesund, Elisabet Rudjord and Van Lippevelde, Wendy and Overby, Nina Cecilie}},
  issn         = {{1654-6628}},
  journal      = {{FOOD & NUTRITION RESEARCH}},
  keywords     = {{PRACTICES QUESTIONNAIRE,DIETARY PATTERNS,CONSUMPTION,CHILDREN,PRESCHOOLERS,VALIDATION,CONSTRUCTS,MEDIATION,BEHAVIOR,QUALITY,infant,healthy food intake,mediation,diet}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  pages        = {{11}},
  title        = {{Associations between parental food choice motives, health-promoting feeding practices, and infants' fruit and vegetable intakes : the Food4toddlers study}},
  url          = {{http://doi.org/10.29219/fnr.v64.3730}},
  volume       = {{64}},
  year         = {{2019}},
}

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