Artículos de revistas
The relation between child feeding problems as measured by parental report and mealtime behavior observation: A pilot study
Fecha
2016-04Registro en:
Van Dijk, Marijn; Bruinsma, Eke; Hauser, Maria Paulina; The relation between child feeding problems as measured by parental report and mealtime behavior observation: A pilot study; Academic Press Ltd - Elsevier Science Ltd; Appetite; 99; 4-2016; 262-267
0195-6663
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Van Dijk, Marijn
Bruinsma, Eke
Hauser, Maria Paulina
Resumen
Because feeding problems have clear negative consequences for both child and caretakers, early diagnosis and intervention are important. Parent-report questionnaires can contribute to early identification, because they are efficient and typically offer a 'holistic' perspective of the child's eating in different contexts. In this pilot study, we aim to explore the concurrent validity of a short screening instrument (the SEP, which is the Dutch MCH-FS) in one of its target populations (a group of premature children) by comparing the total score with the observed behavior of the child and caretaker during a regular home meal. 28 toddlers (aged 9-18 months) and their caretakers participated in the study. Video-observations of the meals were coded for categories of eating behavior and parent-child interaction.The results show that the total SEP-score correlates with food refusal, feeding efficiency, and self-feeding, but not with negative affect and parental instructions. This confirms that the SEP has a certain degree of concurrent validity in the sense that its total score is associated with specific 'benchmark' feeding behaviors: food refusal, feeding efficiency and autonomy. Future studies with larger samples are needed to generalize the findings from this pilot to a broader context.