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A comprehensive assessment of food parenting practices: development and psychometric testing of HomeSTEAD's family food practices survey
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2 2017
Source: J Acad Nutr Diet. 117(2):214-227 -
Alternative Title:J Acad Nutr Diet
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Personal Author:
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Description:Background
Parents' food parenting practices have a significant influence on children's dietary intake and risk for obesity and chronic disease. Understanding the impact and interactions between parents' practices and children's behavior is limited by a lack of development and psychometric testing and/or limited scope of current measures. HomeSTEAD (Home Self-administered Tool for Environmental assessment of Activity and Diet) was created to address this gap.
Objective
This paper describes development and psychometric testing of HomeSTEAD's family food practices survey.
Participants/Design
Between August 2010 and May 2011, a convenience sample of 129 parents of children ages 3-12 years were recruited from central North Carolina and completed the self-administered HomeSTEAD survey on three occasions during a 12 to 18-day window. Demographics and child diet were assessed at Time 1. Child height and weight were measured during the in-home observations (following Time 1 survey).
Statistical analysis
Exploratory factor analysis (EFA) with Time 1 data was used to identify potential scales. Scales with more than three items were examined for scale reduction. Following, mean scores were calculated at each time points. Construct validity was assessed by examining Spearman rank correlations between mean scores (Time 1) and children's diet (fruits and vegetables, sugar-sweetened beverages, snacks, sweets) and BMI z-scores. Repeated measures analysis of variance was used to examine differences in mean scores between time points; and single-measure intraclass correlations (ICC) were calculated to examine test-retest reliability between time points.
Results
EFA identified 24 factors and retained 124 items; however, scale reduction narrowed items to 86. The final instrument captures five Coercive Control practices (16 items), seven Autonomy Support practices (24 items), and 12 Structure practices (46 items). All scales demonstrated good internal reliability (α>0.62), 18 factors demonstrated construct validity (significant association with child diet, p<0.05), and 22 demonstrated good reliability (ICC>0.61).
Conclusions
HomeSTEAD's family food practices survey provides a brief, yet comprehensive and psychometrically sound assessment of food parenting practices.
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Source:
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Pubmed ID:27660178
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Pubmed Central ID:PMC5276728
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