Frequency of family meals and food consumption in families at high risk of type 2 diabetes: the Feel4Diabetes‑study
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Springer
Materia
Family meals Food consumption Diet quality Type 2 diabetes Parents Children
Fecha
2022-03-30Referencia bibliográfica
Mahmood, L... [et al.]. Frequency of family meals and food consumption in families at high risk of type 2 diabetes: the Feel4Diabetes-study. Eur J Pediatr (2022). [https://doi.org/10.1007/s00431-022-04445-4]
Patrocinador
CRUE-CSIC; Springer Nature; European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme 643708Resumen
A family meal is defined as a meal consumed together by the members of a family or by having ≥ 1 parent present during a meal.
The frequency of family meals has been associated with healthier food intake patterns in both children and parents. This study
aimed to investigate in families at high risk for developing type 2 diabetes across Europe the association (i) between family meals’
frequency and food consumption and diet quality among parents and (ii) between family meals’ frequency and children’s food
consumption. Moreover, the study aimed to elucidate the mediating effect of parental diet quality on the association between
family meals’ frequency and children’s food consumption. Food consumption frequency and anthropometric were collected crosssectionally
from a representative sample of 1964 families from the European Feel4Diabetes-study. Regression and mediation
analyses were applied by gender of children. Positive and significant associations were found between the frequency of family
meals and parental food consumption (β = 0.84; 95% CI 0.57, 1.45) and diet quality (β = 0.30; 95% CI 0.19, 0.42). For children,
more frequent family meals were significantly associated with healthier food consumption (boys, β = 0.172, p < 0.05; girls,
β = 0.114, p < 0.01). A partial mediation effect of the parental diet quality was shown on the association between the frequency
of family meals and the consumption of some selected food items (i.e., milk products and salty snacks) among boys and girls.
The strongest mediation effect of parental diet quality was found on the association between the frequency of family breakfast
and the consumption of salty snacks and milk and milk products (62.5% and 37.5%, respectively) among girls.
Conclusions: The frequency of family meals is positively associated with improved food consumption patterns (i.e., higher intake
of fruits and vegetables and reduced consumption of sweets) in both parents and children. However, the association in children is
partially mediated by parents’ diet quality. The promotion of consuming meals together in the family could be a potentially effective
strategy for interventions aiming to establish and maintain healthy food consumption patterns among children.