Mothers' experiences of their own parents' food parenting practices and use of coercive food-related practices with their children

Date

2022-05-12

Advisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

ISSN

0195-6663

Volume Title

Publisher

Elsevier

Type

Article

Peer reviewed

Yes

Abstract

The current research examines the relationships between mothers' experiences of the ways in which they were provided food as a child, their current eating behaviours, and their use of coercive food parenting practices with their own child. Mothers (N = 907 (M = 37 years, SD = 7.7)) completed an online/paper survey that included validated measures of food parenting practices and eating behaviours. Regression analyses show that mothers' experiences of being provided food as a child, and their current eating behaviours are significant unique predictors of engagment in coercive food-related parenting practices with their child. Exploratory mediation analyses further show that the relationship between mothers' experiences of being provided food as a child and use of coercive food-related parenting practices with their child is partially mediated by mothers' eating behaviours. The findings indicate concordance between mothers' experiences of being provided food as a child and use of the same coercive food-related parenting practices with their child. Furthermore, maternal experiences of food-related parenting practices as a child are the strongest predictors of use coercive food parenting practices with their own child. There may be value in focussing on the food-related experiences mothers had as a child in addition to their existing eating behaviours prior to food-related parenting practice intervention. Longitudinal research is needed to strengthen the current findings and to further understand the links identified.

Description

open access article

Keywords

food parenting practices, eating disorders, eating behaviour, feeding practices

Citation

Patel, C., Shuttlewood, E., Karasouli, E., Meyer, C. (2022) Mothers’ experiences of their own parents’ food parenting practices and use of coercive food-related practices with their children. Appetite, 175. 106078

Rights

Research Institute