Skip to content
The Kids Research Institute Australia logo
Donate

Discover . Prevent . Cure .

Associations of parental food-choice control and use of food to soothe with adiposity in childhood and adolescence

Higher parental control over food choice was associated with lower adiposity, but use of food to soothe was not associated with adiposity at ages 7 and 15

Citation:
Chong SY, Chittleborough CR, Gregory T, Lynch JW, Mittinty MN, Smithers LG. Associations of parental food-choice control and use of food to soothe with adiposity in childhood and adolescence. Appetite. 2017;113:71-7

Keywords:
ALSPAC; Adiposity; Food to soothe; Food-choice control

Abstract:
Background: Associations of parental feeding techniques with adiposity are mixed and largely rely on cross-sectional studies. We examined associations between parental food-choice control and using food to soothe at 3.5 years on adiposity at 7 and 15 years.

Methods: Participants were from the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children (n = 7312). Food-choice control was assessed using the item ‘how much choice do you allow him/her in deciding what foods he eats at meals?’. Use of food to soothe was reported by mothers on the item ‘how often do you use sweets or other foods to stop his/her crying or fussing?’. BMI at 7 and 15 years was converted to sex- and age-adjusted z-scores. Fat mass was assessed at 15 years using dual energy X-ray absorptiometry.

Results: In fully-adjusted models, children given the least choice had 0.08 lower BMI z-score at age 7 years and 0.12 lower BMI z-score,1.46 kg lower fat mass at 15 years than children with the most choices. There was no evidence of an association between using food to soothe and adiposity.

Conclusions: Contrary to some studies, higher parental control over food choice was associated with lower adiposity, but use of food to soothe was not associated with adiposity at ages 7 and 15.