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Journal Article

Citation

Jackson DB, Vaughn MG. Public Health Nutr. 2019; 22(10): 1840-1849.

Affiliation

2College for Public Health & Social Justice,Saint Louis University,St. Louis,MO,USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2019, Nutrition Society, Publisher Cambridge University Press)

DOI

10.1017/S1368980019000065

PMID

30767817

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To determine whether children exposed to a greater variety of acts of parent-to-child physical and psychological maltreatment will be at greater risk of consuming obesogenic foods at a higher frequency.

DESIGN: Survey research using a longitudinal panel design. SETTING: In-home interviews with primary caregivers in twenty large US cities.ParticipantsA national sample of at-risk children and their families who participated in the Fragile Families and Child Wellbeing Study (FFCWS).

RESULTS: Child maltreatment emerged as a statistically significant (P<0ยท01) and robust predictor of obesogenic food consumption, in both cross-sectional and longitudinal analyses. Child maltreatment also consistently emerged as one of the strongest predictors of obesogenic food consumption in these models. Ancillary analyses indicated that physical maltreatment plays a particularly important role in these associations.

CONCLUSIONS: A major implication of the present study is that child maltreatment prevention efforts should be reflected in interventions that seek to diminish unhealthy eating practices among children. Multi-professional teams can work together on obesity prevention not only via education but also by considering the interconnectedness of obesogenic food consumption and experiences of maltreatment.


Language: en

Keywords

Childhood; Diet; Maltreatment; Obesogenic; Parent-to-child aggression; Parents

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