1 / 21

Childhood eating behaviours, correlates and impact: results from a Danish population cohort

Childhood eating behaviours, correlates and impact: results from a Danish population cohort. Dr Nadia Micali MD, MRCPsych, PhD NIHR Clinician Scientist and Honorary Consultant Psychiatrist UCL Institute of Child Health N.Micali@ucl.ac.uk. Background.

kaden
Télécharger la présentation

Childhood eating behaviours, correlates and impact: results from a Danish population cohort

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Childhood eating behaviours, correlates and impact: results from a Danish population cohort Dr Nadia Micali MD, MRCPsych, PhD NIHR Clinician Scientist and Honorary Consultant Psychiatrist UCL Institute of Child Health N.Micali@ucl.ac.uk

  2. Background • Rates of feeding difficulties vary from 25% to 5% in infancy/childhood Chatoor 2002; Lindberg, Bohlin, & Hagekull 1991; Esparo et al. 2004 • Picky/fussy eating commonly researched problem (20%) (Jacobi et al.,2003; 2008) • Feeding/eating problems cause of great stress for parents & parental stress may itself exacerbate feeding difficulties Douglas 2000; Harris & Booth 1992

  3. Aims • To determine the prevalence of feeding behaviours previously identified in the literature at age 5; • To clarify the definition of feeding difficulties and their impact • To determine associations of feeding behaviours and childhood psychopathology

  4. Methods • Eating behaviour instrument developed from: • the Childhood Eating Behaviour Questionnaire (CEBQ) • Children’s Eating Behaviour Inventory (CEBI) • Stanford Feeding questionnaire • Final instrument: 41 items

  5. Eating behaviour questionnaire Please tick one box for each item and answer YES or NO in the last column for each item

  6. SampleCCCC2000 – 5-7 year follow-up Random sample: 3000 9 died 79 not contactable

  7. Gender, birth-weight, birth compl, gest. Age, APGAR: NS

  8. Socio-demographics • Median age: 6.1 years • Gender: Males (49.7%)

  9. Factor analysis • 41 items: 3 questions on impairment, 4 questions from Stanford Feeding questionnaire, 12 from CEBQ, 22 from CEBI • Promax factor analysis restricted to 5 factors (eigenvalue of >1.5)

  10. Factor analysis (I) • Factor 1: overeating/good eating (enjoys eating/takes food between meals/asks for food between meals/is interested in food/ always asking for food/given the chance would always have food in their mouth/given the choice would eat most of the time) • Factor 2: picky eating (at dinner I let my child choose the food they want from what is served/eats a limited variety of food/eats food only if prepared in specific ways/has strong food likes and dislikes/accepts new foods readily) • Factor 3: poor eating (I feed child if he/she doesn’t eat/ takes more than ½ hour to eat their meal/I feel confident my child eats enough (negative)/ my child eats quickly (negative)/I get upset when my child doesn’t eat/ my child has a big appetite (negative))

  11. Factor analysis (II) • Factor 4: delayed eating behaviours (chews food as expected for his/her age (negative)/ feeds himself as expected for his age (negative)/ my child gags at mealtime/I find our meals stressful/ uses cutlery as expected for his age (negative)/says when she/he is hungry (negative)/chokes at mealtime/lets food sit in her mouth/my child says when he/she is hungry (negative)) • Factor 5: snacking behaviours(asks for food which he/she shouldn’t have/ at home eats foods he/she shouldn’t have/ I let my child have snacks between meals/gets full before his meal is finished/cannot eat a meal if he has had a snack before)

  12. Did not map onto any factor

  13. How to determine presence/absence of behaviours and impact • Prevalence: Behaviour present at least sometimes i.e. a score of ≥3.5 • Impact: 3 impact questions

  14. Presence and impact of eating behaviours: factors

  15. Frequency and impact of eating behaviours: single items *reverse item

  16. Eating behaviours and psychopathology *:p<0.01, **:p<0.01, ***: p<0.05; _: denotes a cell where no association was hypothesised

  17. Summary • 5 eating behavioural patterns identified: overeating/good eating, picky eating, slow/poor eating, delayed eating behaviours, snacking • Picky eating: most common in ~7% - “emotional undereating”~ 27%

  18. Summary (II) • Picky eating, slow/poor eating associated with high impact • Picky eating associated with behavioural problems, PDD and functional somatic symptoms • Emotional undereating also associated with emotional disorders and functional somatic symptoms

  19. Conclusions • Behaviours identified are in line with previous reports • Picky eating is a relatively common behaviour and is importantly related with psychological outcomes and impact • Improved recognition of childhood eating problems might be important for paediatricians and child psychiatrists

  20. Next step • Look at child and parental predictors: -obstetric complications -parental psychiatric disorders (ED) -infancy data (including failure to thrive)

  21. Acknowledgements • Institute of Social psychiatry Danish “team”: Anne Mette Skovgaard Hanne Elberling Charlotte Rask Else Marie Olsen • Emily Simonoff

More Related