Factors in the home environment associated with toddler diet: An ecological momentary assessment study

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Abstract

Objective To identify home environment factors associated with toddler dietary behaviours using ecological momentary assessment (EMA). Design Home environment and toddler's diet were assessed by mothers through EMA (random beeps over ≤8 d and a brief survey). Dietary outcomes were fruit/vegetable consumption, eating episode ('snack' v. 'meal') and sugar-sweetened beverage (SSB) consumption. Home environment factors included interacting with mother, eating alone/with others, eating in a high chair/chair at the table, watching television and movement/translocation. Multilevel logistic mixed-effects regression models assessed both within-(individual toddlers across time) and between-(toddlers-on-average) subject effects. Subjects Low-income mother-toddler dyads (n 277). Setting Urban and suburban Maryland, USA. Results EMA captured eating/drinking episodes for 249/277 (89·9 %) toddlers (883 eating episodes, 1586 drinking episodes). Toddlers-on-average were more likely (adjusted OR, P value) to eat fruit/vegetables when not moving around (0·43, P=0·043), eat with the television off (0·33, P<0·001) and eat in a high chair/chair (3·38, P<0·001); no within-subject effects were shown. For eating episodes, both toddlers-on-average and individual toddlers were more likely to eat snacks when not in a high chair/chair (0·13, P<0·001 and 0·06, P<0·001, respectively) and when eating alone (0·30, P<0·001 and 0·31, P<0·001, respectively). Also, individual toddlers were more likely to eat snacks when moving around (3·61, P<0·001). Toddlers-on-average were more likely to consume SSB when not in a high chair/chair (0·21, P=0·001), eating alone (0·38, P=0·047) or during a snacking episode (v. a meal: 3·96, P=0·012); no within-subject effects shown. Conclusions Factors in the home environment are associated with dietary behaviours among toddlers. Understanding the interplay between the home environment and toddler diet can inform future paediatric dietary recommendations.

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APA

Campbell, K. L., Babiarz, A., Wang, Y., Tilton, N. A., Black, M. M., & Hager, E. R. (2018). Factors in the home environment associated with toddler diet: An ecological momentary assessment study. Public Health Nutrition, 21(10), 1855–1864. https://doi.org/10.1017/S1368980018000186

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