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  • Predicting what mothers feed their preschoolers: Guided by an extended theory of planned behaviour

    Author(s)
    McKee, Megan
    Mullan, Barbara
    Mergelsberg, Enrique
    Gardner, Benjamin
    Hamilton, Kyra
    Slabbert, Ashley
    Kothe, Emily
    Griffith University Author(s)
    Hamilton, Kyra
    Year published
    2019
    Metadata
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    Abstract
    BACKGROUND: Healthy eating behaviours are important for physical and mental well-being and developing healthy eating behaviours early in life is important. As parents are the main providers of preschool children's food the main objective of this study was to use the theory of planned behaviour, expanded to include habit and past behaviour, to predict parents' healthy feeding intention and behaviour. METHODS: Theory of planned behaviour, habit strength, and past behaviour were reported at baseline by 443 mothers. One week later, 235 mothers completed a healthy feeding questionnaire on the eating behaviours of their 2-4 year ...
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    BACKGROUND: Healthy eating behaviours are important for physical and mental well-being and developing healthy eating behaviours early in life is important. As parents are the main providers of preschool children's food the main objective of this study was to use the theory of planned behaviour, expanded to include habit and past behaviour, to predict parents' healthy feeding intention and behaviour. METHODS: Theory of planned behaviour, habit strength, and past behaviour were reported at baseline by 443 mothers. One week later, 235 mothers completed a healthy feeding questionnaire on the eating behaviours of their 2-4 year old child. Data were analysed using hierarchical regression analyses to predict parent's general healthy feeding behaviour, and five sub-behaviours: parents' perceptions of their child's fruit and vegetable consumption, healthy and unhealthy snacking behaviour, as well as healthy and unhealthy drinking behaviour. RESULTS: Intention, perceived behavioural control, habit strength and past behaviour were all positively associated with parents' general healthy feeding (47% explained variance). Perceived behavioural control was the only variable positively associated with mothers' perception of their child's fruit and vegetable consumption and unhealthy snacking behaviour. The theory did not explain the other behaviours. Moreover, habit strength only strengthened the intention-behaviour link for fruit and vegetable consumption and child's age was only positively associated with the mothers' perception of their child's unhealthy snacking behaviour. DISCUSSION: The findings suggest important differences in the predictors of different feeding behaviours that can provide direction for future intervention development.
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    Journal Title
    APPETITE
    Volume
    137
    DOI
    https://doi.org/10.1016/j.appet.2019.03.011
    Subject
    Nutrition and dietetics
    Publication URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10072/384135
    Collection
    • Journal articles

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