Abstract

Understanding parents’ feeding control practices and their associations with various factors is useful for prevention of childhood obesity, an emerging problem in low- and middle-income countries. The aim of this paper is to describe the control practices used by parents of preschool children in Vietnam and factors associated with these. Two cross-sectional studies were conducted in urban DodaLab (n = 1364) and rural FilaBavi (n = 1313), Health and Demographic Surveillance Sites (HDSS), Hanoi, Vietnam. For 94.9 % of the children, both parents answered the Child Feeding Questionnaire and additional questions about nutritional practices. Children’s and parents’ weight and height were measured. Simple Pearson correlation coefficients, multiple regression and exploratory factor analysis were used for the statistical analysis. Mothers reported the use of more restriction, pressure to eat and monitoring than the fathers. The measured child’s body mass index (BMI) and the mother’s perception of the child’s weight were negatively associated with pressure to eat and positively associated with monitoring. A positive association was found between restriction and the mother’s perception of the child’s weight. In the rural area, high consumption of fatty food, sweets and snacks was associated with high use of restriction and monitoring. The amount of food consumed was negatively associated with the use of pressure to eat. In the urban area, consumption of fatty food and sweets was positively correlated both with restriction and pressure to eat. Monitoring was negatively associated with consumption of fatty food and snacks and positively with the amount of food. Higher education of the mothers was associated with higher use of monitoring, restriction (in the urban area) and pressure to eat (in the rural area). While feeding practices in Vietnam differed between mothers and fathers and between urban and rural areas, the associations with children’s BMI and socioeconomic factors were weak. This implies that parental roles as well as sociodemographic factors should be considered when designing programs for prevention of childhood overweight and obesity.

Highlights

  • Understanding parents’ feeding control practices and their associations with various factors is useful for prevention of childhood obesity, an emerging problem in low- and middle-income countries

  • In a study from 2013 in two Health and Demographic Surveillance Sites (HDSS) one urban and one rural, we found an overall estimate of 14.5 % and an even higher estimate in the urban site (Loan Minh Do et al: Preschool overweight and obesity in urban and rural Vietnam: Differences in prevalence and associated factors)

  • The aims of this paper are (1) to describe the use of the three feeding practices, restriction, pressure to eat and monitoring, as reported by mothers and fathers and how these practices compare between boys and girls as well as between the urban and rural site and (2) to identify associations between the parental feeding practices and children’s diet and body mass index (BMI), parents’ perceptions of children’s weight as well as socio-economic factors in one urban and one rural setting in Vietnam

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Summary

Introduction

Understanding parents’ feeding control practices and their associations with various factors is useful for prevention of childhood obesity, an emerging problem in low- and middle-income countries. The aim of this paper is to describe the control practices used by parents of preschool children in Vietnam and factors associated with these. Parents are important for creating food and eating environments, as models for eating at home and through their feeding practices. Parents use different practices to control the eating habits of their offspring. The effectiveness of these practices varies depending on the way they are executed [7,8,9]. For different reasons, parents attempt to encourage children to eat more. Monitoring is used to supervise the child’s eating behavior

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