Abstract
Feeding and parenting are inextricably linked. The complex bidirectional interactions between parent feeding practices and child eating behaviour shape the early feeding environment which in turn interacts with genetic predispositions to lay the foundation for life-long eating habits and health outcomes. Parent feeding and child (and parent) eating are central to the fabric of family life and are strongly rooted in culture and tradition. Yet, many parents experience stress and anxiety related to this ubiquitous parenting task and perceive their child as a “fussy eater” or a “difficult feeder.” Parents commonly misinterpret heritable and developmentally “normal” child eating behaviour, such as food refusal, as cause for concern. In an effort to get their child to “eat well” they respond with coercive feeding practices, such as pressure, reward and restriction. Emotional feeding that uses food to comfort, distract, calm or shape behaviour is also common. Although well intentioned, these non-responsive, parent- rather than child-centred feeding practices are ineffective, even counterproductive. They teach children to eat for reasons unrelated to appetite and, hence, more than they need and fail to support development of healthy food preferences and appetite regulation. Early feeding interventions are needed that assist parents to understand normal child eating behaviour and promote responsive feeding practices and effective food parenting. The aim of this chapter is to review (1) “normal” eating behaviour of young children, (2) the range of feeding practices and strategies that parents use to respond to and try to shape these behaviours, (3) evidence for approaches to feeding young children that have potential to reduce conflict related to child feeding and promote life-long healthy eating patterns that are a key determinant of long-term health and well-being and (4) to provide an overview of an early feeding intervention, NOURISH, which demonstrated a positive impact on maternal feeding practices and potentially reduced parent anxiety and stress related to feeding.
Key Messages
• Feeding and parenting are inextricably linked. They shape the early feeding environment which interacts with genetics to influence the development of child eating patterns, which in turn are key determinants of life-long eating habits and associated health outcomes.
• Parents frequently misinterpret “normal” child eating behaviour as a cause for concern and respond with coercive, non-responsive feeding practices that are associated with adverse outcomes for child food preferences, appetite regulation and weight status. In addition, such practices may be a source of stress and distress for both parents and child.
• Parents respond positively to interventions designed to promote responsive feeding practices with positive outcomes for child eating behaviour and growth, stress and distress related to child feeding and broader parent-child interactions and family happiness and well-being.
Introduction
Feeding and parenting are inextricably linked, and infant feeding is central to the first maternal-child interactions [1]. Both feeding and parenting contribute to child physical, social, cognitive and behavioural development and well-being [2-4]. Consistent with the life course model [5], genetics and the early feeding environment interact to shape child food preferences, dietary intake and behaviours [6]. These lay the foundation for life-long eating habits and behaviours, which in turn are powerful predictors of long-term health outcomes, such as obesity, diabetes, cardiovascular disease and some cancers [7]. Parents are the gatekeepers of the early feeding environment which is shaped by complex parent-child interactions in the context of feeding and eating. These interactions have been termed “food parenting” [8]. In parallel with general parenting constructs, food parenting is considered to include feeding style and feeding practices. Feeding style is the broad emotional climate of the feeding dynamic, and feeding practices are the specific strategies and actions (the “when, what and how”) of child feeding [8]. In this paper, “feeding” refers to what parents do to nourish their child. “Eating” is what the child does and includes food preferences, dietary (nutrients and food) intake and eating behaviour. Increasingly, evidence suggests that food parenting involves bidirectional interactions whereby parent feeding practices can influence and/or respond to child eating behaviours [9-11].
Parent feeding and child eating are central to the fabric of family life and are strongly rooted in culture and tradition. Yet, many parents experience stress and anxiety rated to this ubiquitous parenting task and perceive their young child as a “difficult feeder.” Tensions and battles related to feeding young children are common and have the potential to impact on the quality of family meal times, parent confidence and broader family dynamics and well-being [12]. The aim of this chapter is to review (1) our understanding of “normal” eating behaviour of young children, (2) the range of feeding practices and strategies that parents use to respond to and try to shape these behaviours, (3) evidence for approaches to feeding young children that have potential to reduce conflict related to child feeding and promote life-long healthy eating patterns and (4) to provide an overview of an early feeding intervention, NOURISH, which demonstrated a positive impact on and improved maternal feeding practices.
“Normal” Child Eating Behaviours and Appetite Traits
Child eating behaviours are a product of complex interactions between genetics and environment [13, 14]. Infants are born with predispositions that include a preference for sweet tastes and rejection of bitter/sour tastes and novel or unfamiliar foods. These genetic predispositions probably had evolutionary advantages whereby the child readily accepted sweet energy-dense foods (including breast milk) and avoided bitter (e.g., vegetables) and unfamiliar foods that were potentially toxic. These preferences are no longer adaptive in our current food environment where our food supply is largely safe, energy-dense foods are readily available and childhood obesity is prevalent [15-18]. Neophobia or rejection of novel foods is present from weaning and strengthens with child autonomy to peak at 2–5 years of age [17, 18]. These inborn heritable preferences can be modified by early feeding experiences, such as repeated neutral exposure to facilitate familiarity and acceptance [16-21]. It appears that food likes and dislikes are broadly established by 3–5 years of age and persist over time [18, 21]. Infants also have an inborn capacity to regulate their energy intake to need and operationalise this via cues of hunger and satiety. Parent recognition and responses to these cues are an integral component of food parenting and can either support or undermine this intrinsic self-regulation, which provides the foundation for healthy growth and long-term weight status [3, 4, 22, 23].
Eating behaviours in childhood (2–8 years) are widely described and assessed using the parent-report Children’s Eating Behaviour Questionnaire (CEBQ). The 8 behaviour/style scales (Table 1) have been broadly categorised into 4 food “approach” behaviours and 4 food “avoidance” behaviours [24]. The parallel Baby Eating Behaviour Questionnaire [25] has also been developed for use in infants. It includes 4 constructs in common with the CEBQ (Table 1), with items modified to account for milk feeding and an additional single item “my baby had a big appetite.” More recently, it has become clear that these behaviours have a strong genetic component and are now often referred to as “appetitive traits” [26, 27]. Children rated highly on the “food approach” or “food avoidance” scales have been described as having a “big” or “small” appetite, respectively, and these clusters of traits have been prospectively associated with weight status [13, 28]. Recent evidence indicates that, notwithstanding their heritability, these traits/behaviours are to some degree both responsive to and able to drive food parenting [9, 11, 29, 30, 31].
Food fussiness (FF) or “picky eating” is an eating behaviour reported by 10–50% of parents and a source of considerable concern and conflict in families [18, 32-35]. There is no consensus on the definitions of “fussy” or “picky” eating [33]. This umbrella label is attributed to a cluster of child behaviours that centre on food refusal, where anecdotally the child does not eat what or as much as their carer thinks they should. Parents want their child to be a “good eater” and praise them for eating all that is offered [36]. FF is largely a matter of parent perception, which confounds interpretation of studies, as most assessment tools are based on parent self-report [36]. FF typically includes refusal of both familiar and unfamiliar foods [32-34]. Neophobia or refusal of unfamiliar foods is frequently labelled as FF but, as discussed above, is a normal developmental phase that may once have conferred evolutionary advantage [16, 18]. It is also heritable but varies with age, and some adults retain neophobic eating behaviours [34, 37]. Parents often also report concern about erratic appetite and seemingly “ad hoc” refusal of foods which their child both is familiar with and usually eats [32, 35]. Whilst often perceived as a “negative” eating behaviour, such refusal potentially signals satiety and the child’s intrinsic self-regulation in action. It may also be a means by which a toddler can assert their emerging need for autonomy [2, 3, 23, 32]. Quality prospective studies examining the impact of FF on objectively measured dietary intake and growth are scarce [33]. Consistent with the notion that FF is primarily a matter of parent perception of developmentally “normal” eating behaviour, there is very little evidence of an adverse impact of FF on growth and development in healthy children born at term [36]. However, there is evidence that there are bidirectional prospective relationships between maternal-reported FF and undesirable maternal food practices [11, 30]. Parent (fathers’ and mothers’) concern (how frequently they worried about 4 aspects of fussy eating) has been shown to fully mediate the cross-sectional relationships between FF and inappropriate parent feeding practices [38]. A recent study [36] reported that 30% of mothers perceived their child (age 14 months) as a “fussy eater.” This perception was associated with mothers reporting that their child mostly decided how much to eat and with a lower relative weight (researcher measured), but not with objectively assessed dietary intake or quality. Importantly, all children were within the healthy weight range. The perception of their child as a fussy eater at 14 months, despite healthy weight status and no measurable relative reduction in dietary quality, was prospectively associated with less appropriate food parenting at 2 years of age [36]. In summary, it is the characterisation of developmentally normal food refusal in young children as “fussy eating” and a problematic non-compliant behaviour [35] that is more of an issue than the behaviour per se. Assisting parents to understand that these child eating behaviours commonly labelled as “fussy” or “picky” eating are influenced by genetics and developmental stage and, hence, are “normal” and, furthermore, could be important signals of satiety, may reduce anxiety and concern related to feeding and have a positive impact on food parenting.
Child eating behaviours manifest in the context of child characteristics, such as temperament, and broader developmental tasks, such as autonomy, separation, self-regulation and acquisition of motor skills [2]. From 12 to 24 months of age, growth and weight gain slow such that relative energy and hence food requirements/appetite decrease. In addition, neophobia escalates and separation/autonomy becomes a key developmental task [34, 35]. Suddenly, parents are faced with a baby who was a “good eater” transitioning to a toddler who has an erratic appetite and overall appears to eat less, insists on self-feeding despite limited fine motor skills and feeding competence, starts to show distinct likes and dislikes and refuses foods previously well accepted, needs to assert and test their emerging independence, is much more mobile and less willing to sit still for extended periods and is often frustrated with the many tasks of emotional, cognitive and physical development [39]. Feeding provides numerous opportunities every day for the parent and child to interact around these issues and, if not managed well, has great potential to induce stress and distress for both. It is impossible to “make” children eat. Efforts to do so, even though they are well intentioned, are not only ineffective but can also be counterproductive in terms of developing healthy long-term eating patterns. Furthermore, they may undermine general parenting confidence and effectiveness [2, 39].
In summary, child eating behaviours are complex and include the expression of inborn food preferences and appetitive traits, neophobia, emotional responses to food and intrinsic regulation of intake via signals of hunger/satiety. They are in part heritable and influenced by a range of other child characteristics, such as temperament (also heritable), developmental stage and possibly gender [2, 39]. Parent understanding of and responses to these “normal” behaviours manifest in feeding styles and practices that in turn influence both short- and long-term eating behaviours and habits. It is increasingly clear that the parent-child feeding dynamic is bidirectional. Clearly, we cannot work directly with young children to influence their early eating behaviours. However, food parenting is modifiable [40-42]. Ensuring that parents have realistic expectations of the early feeding dynamic as well as the confidence and skills to respond appropriately to “normal” and changing child eating behaviour in the context of overall child development has great potential to reduce anxiety and conflict.
Parent Feeding Practices and Their Potential Relationship with Parent-Child Conflicts
Parents, particularly mothers, report considerable anxiety related to feeding, with a third to half of mothers reporting that their otherwise healthy child is difficult to feed or fussy [32, 33, 41]. There are a range of cultural, social and biological factors that contribute to the common notion that infants and particularly toddlers are “difficult to feed.” From an evolutionary perspective, a reliable, plentiful food supply is a very recent phenomenon. It is plausible that mothers are “hardwired” to feed their children as often and as much as possible to ensure survival. Child feeding is strongly embedded in culture and tradition, and feeding practices are passed from grandmother to mother to daughter [15]. Even in high-income countries, it is only 2–3 generations ago that feeding children occurred in the context of comparative food scarcity [43, 44]. The traditional approaches to child feeding in this context are likely to be ineffective, even counterproductive, in our current environment where food is widely available and relatively affordable, unhealthy foods are ever present and heavily marketed, particularly to children, and excess consumption is the “norm.” Furthermore, new approaches to child feeding are required that are adapted to shifts in economic and social factors (e.g., family structures, parent work patterns, eating out) [15].
From a sociological perspective, even in our contemporary societies, there are pervasive expectations that “good women” are “good mothers” and “good mothers” feed their children well. Adding to these pressures are well-intentioned but potentially misinformed and unhelpful advice from family and friends and an abundance of information of highly variable validity available on the internet. Despite good intentions, parents are likely to use traditional feeding practices advised and supported by family and friends without understanding the potential impact on child health in the context of the radically changed contemporary food supply [2, 15]. The “obesity epidemic” further adds to parent pressure. There is heightened awareness of the adverse short- and long-term outcomes of overweight/obesity. With around 25% of children and up to 70% of adults above the healthy weight range [45], this is a salient issue for many families. Up to three-quarters of women aged 25–45 years (and hence mothers), even those within the healthy weight range, report degrees of disordered eating or concern about their weight that interfere with their happiness [46]. Mothers plausibly wish to avoid passing their issues related to food and eating on to their children. There is evidence that maternal eating behaviours are associated with feeding practices [47] and child eating behaviour [48]. In addition, even in non-clinical samples, there is a relationship between child feeding and parental emotional and psychological well-being [49, 50]. It is no wonder parents find the “what, when, where and how” of food parenting a source of concern and conflict.
There are numerous conceptualisations and tools used to describe and measure parent feeding practices [51-53]. Table 2 summarises a variety of prevalent feeding practices with practical examples. In a recent review, Vaughn et al. [8] sought to rationalise food parenting constructs and terminology. They identified 3 overarching food parenting constructs: coercive control; structure; autonomy support of promotion. “Coercive control” includes pressure and authoritarian, overt restriction, both of which override the child’s hunger and satiety cues and undermine their capacity to self-regulate intake and hence are classified as non-responsive feeding practices [3, 4, 23]. Emotional or instrumental feeding practices (e.g., using food to calm; see Table 2) are also categorised as non-responsive [53]. These parent-centred, controlling feeding practices are prevalent and postulated to teach children to eat for reasons unrelated to appetite and to habitually eat more than they want or need [3, 4, 23, 32]. There is a substantial body of evidence which indicates that such non-responsive feeding practices are associated with poor outcomes in terms of child eating behaviour, diet quality and weight status [3, 4, 8, 15, 23, 31, 54, 55]. Consequently, interventions have generally sought to have parents avoid/reduce these behaviours. This “deficit” approach requires parents to “stop doing things” and has potential to contribute to parent guilt and anxiety.
“Structure” refers to practices that parents can use to organise and manage the eating environment such that child feeding competence and autonomy, enhanced food acceptance and intrinsic regulation of intake are encouraged. Examples are shown in Table 2 and include rules, limits and routines related to eating [8, 52, 56]. Hurley et al. [23] argue that structure provides a context in which the child can clearly express their hunger/satiety cues and parents are more able to appropriately recognise, interpret and respond to these cues. Structure practices, such as family meal times and routines, also provide important opportunities for socialisation to family food practices and traditions [8]. A recent study [56] demonstrated that structure operationalised via meal setting (where the child eats) and family meal setting (eats the same food as the family) were associated with parents reporting increased child ability to regulate food intake, based on an 8-item scale. Mealtime structure has also been associated with improved child FF, enjoyment of food and child and family well-being [56, 57]. Encouraging structure and limits related to eating offers a strengths-based approach to promoting positive feeding practices. Furthermore, the strategies are comparatively straightforward to understand and implement [56].
“Autonomy support” explicitly links food parenting practices to age-appropriate developmental milestones, such as emotional self-regulation, independence and cognitive capability [8]. It includes strategies that aim to develop food literacy (education, reasoning, involvement in preparation) and positively support (encourage, negotiate, praise) development of healthy eating habits. Promoting “autonomy support” strategies is also potentially a strength-based approach but requires explicit promotion of a nuanced emotional tone associated with implementation to ensure practices do not become coercive, e.g., encouragement versus pressure and “process” praise (e.g., “well done for trying new food”) versus “person” praise (e.g., “good girl for finishing your dinner”) as an emotional reward [8].
Recommendations that seek to promote child-centred responsive feeding that recognises and responds appropriately to child cues of hunger and satiety and, hence, supports rather than undermines the child’s inborn capacity to regulate intake are commonly based on the “trust” model [22]. This framework has also been termed the “Division of Responsibility” [39] (“parent provide, child decide”)and argues that parents are responsible for providing safe, developmentally appropriate, nutritious food, while the child is responsible for deciding whether and how much they eat. As such, this approach discourages coercive and controlling feeding practices (pressure, restriction, reward) and emphasises the feeding dynamic. It has also been described as authoritative feeding, analogous to an authoritative parenting style, where the carer responds warmly, consistently and predictably to child cues but also sets limits via structure [4]. Both authoritative feeding and parenting have been associated with a broad range of positive developmental outcomes [3, 4].
The food parenting practices discussed thus far have largely focussed on the “how” of feeding in the context of supporting the child’s intrinsic regulation of food (energy) intake. Food preferences are an important factor in food acceptance and choice (“what”), which in turn are key determinants of eating habits [17, 18]. As indicated above, infants are born predisposed to prefer sweet tastes and reject bitter/sour and unfamiliar foods (neophobia). Whilst these traits are heritable, they are also modified by early feeding experience. Table 2 gives some examples of common feeding practices used in response to neophobia. There is considerable evidence that repeated neutral (i.e., non-coercive) exposure to a wide variety of foods, particularly whilst neophobia is relatively low (4–10 months) [16, 37], can ameliorate these innate preferences and promote new food acceptance and improved dietary variety [19] and dietary quality [16-18]. Cooke argues that young children need repeated neutral exposure to become familiar with foods so that they can “learn to like and then like to eat” [17]. In our current food environment, there are plenty of opportunities for infants/toddlers to experience and learn to like unhealthy (high-sugar/fat, low-nutrient) foods. Indeed, early exposure to unhealthy foods is associated with enhanced preference and potentially increased intake of these foods [20, 21]. A recent prospective study [20] showed that the more variety of fruits and vegetables and the fewer non-core (high-fat/sugar, low-nutrient) foods a child had “tried” by 14 months of age predicted the number of foods within these food groups both liked and eaten, as well as improved diet quality at 3.7 years of age. Furthermore, children who had tried more vegetables by 14 months were also reported as less fussy at 3.7 years. These prospective associations were independent of maternal age, education, body mass index, duration of breast feeding, age of solid introduction and child fussiness at 14 months. Overall, repeated neutral exposure to healthy foods and limiting exposure to unhealthy foods are important food parenting practices to support the development of healthy food preferences and eating habits. It is critical that parents are supported to implement these strategies in conjunction with responsive feeding practices and structure to avoid counterproductive coercive controlling feeding practices.
In summary, effective food parenting practices have the capacity to positively influence the development of early taste preference, texture tolerance and appetite regulation that lay the foundation for life-long healthy food preferences and eating behaviours. However, studies suggest that sub-optimal feeding practices, including coercive, non-responsive feeding, that are characterised by excess maternal control and that teach children to eat for reasons unrelated to appetite are prevalent. Studies show that dietary quality is poor even in very young children and suggest that feeding practices related to early exposure are also sub-optimal [31, 32, 58]. Evidence and clinical experience suggest that food parenting is a source of considerable anxiety and conflict within families and that once an adverse feeding dynamic is established, it is very difficult to change. Interventions that promote positive feeding practices and increase the skills and confidence to support effective food parenting have the potential to positively influence health and well-being at the parent, child and family levels. Yet, there are very few food parenting interventions that have been well-described and evaluated in large robust clinical trials. One such trial will be discussed in the following section.
The NOURISH Intervention and Randomised Controlled Trial
The NOURISH intervention was designed for first-time mothers with healthy term infants. The aim was to promote “protective” feeding practices that supported the development of healthy child eating behaviours, food intake and growth. The focus was on feeding practices from the start of solid feeding onwards. The intervention was evaluated by a randomised controlled trial designed and implemented according to standard recommendations. The protocol, intervention content and process and outcomes have been reported in detail [40-42, 59]. Briefly, first-time mothers of healthy term infants were initially approached on post-natal wards. Subsequently, 698 mothers and infants (mean 4.3 months old) underwent baseline assessment and randomization. The intervention consisted of 2 modules of 6 group sessions of 1.5 h duration delivered fortnightly over 12 weeks. Sessions were facilitated at local child health clinics by study dietitians and psychologists using standardised facilitator and participant materials. The first module commenced immediately after baseline assessment at infants’ age 4 months. The second module commenced 6 months after completion of the first (9 months from baseline) when the children were 14 months old. An important aspect of the NOURISH intervention was the use of an anticipatory guidance framework to provide parents with developmentally appropriate information about “normal” infant behaviours and constructive responses, rather than waiting to seek advice on established problems. This dictated commencing the intervention when the infants were about 4 months old, just as mothers started complementary feeding, consistent with the evidence that suggests that the very early feeding experience (food parenting) lays the foundation for life-long eating patterns [15, 60].
The NOURISH intervention strategies, themes and corresponding parent messages are shown in Table 3, and a summary of module content is shown in Table 4. There were 3 content-targeted key domains of food parenting associated with positive outcomes in child eating behaviour, dietary quality and growth: (1) repeated neutral exposure to unfamiliar healthy foods and neutral limited exposure to unhealthy foods to promote healthy food preferences and acceptance of a wide range of tastes and textures [16, 17, 34]; (2) responsive feeding that attends to and responds appropriately to infant appetite cues to maintain and support self-regulation of intake to need and avoid overfeeding [3, 22, 23] and (3) positive parenting – warmth, encouragement of autonomy and self-efficacy [1, 4, 61]. Modules were designed to be consistent with developmental stage. Module 1 focussed on complementary feeding, whilst module 2 concentrated on managing toddler eating behaviour, particularly in the context of developmental needs for autonomy, and promoting feeding competence. The control group had self-directed access to standard child health services which at the mothers’ initiative could include a telephone helpline and child weight measurement.
Outcomes were assessed 6 months and 2 and 3.5 years after completion of the intervention/module 2 and corresponding to child ages 2, 3.5 and 5 years, respectively [31, 41, 42, 55]. Validated maternal-report tools were used to assess child intake (24-h recall), food preferences and eating behaviours and maternal feeding practices, strategies to manage food refusal and parenting skills. Longitudinal analysis evaluated differences between the intervention and control groups at the 3 time points over the 3.5-year follow-up period [41, 42]. Mothers allocated to the intervention group demonstrated sustained and statistically significant improvements in feeding practices relative to those in the control group up to 3.5 years after intervention completion. Intervention mothers reported using less non-responsive feeding on 6/9 subscales [41, 42]. From 2 to 5 years of age, children in the intervention group were reported to have a small increase in satiety responsiveness and reduction in food responsiveness and fussiness, an overall pattern of appetite traits associated with healthier weight status [31]. The effect sizes were small, consistent with the heritability of these appetite traits as discussed above [26, 27], but provide evidence that increased use of responsive feeding practices may contribute to a reduction in “obesogenic” appetite traits consistent with healthy child eating behaviour [31]. These positive intervention effects on food parenting and child eating behaviour were associated with the body mass index Z-score at each follow-up assessment, being 16–17% lower (p = 0.06) for the intervention versus the control children. However, these positive intervention effects did not translate into measurable effects on food preferences or dietary intake or quality. There was no group effect on dietary intake assessed by a single 24-h recall. There were small positive intervention effects on food preferences (75 vs. 69% liked 16 fruits listed) and fruit and vegetable variety and frequency over 24 h and 7 days [31].
The NOURISH trial did not explicitly examine outcomes related to maternal happiness or parent conflict or distress related to feeding. However, there were a number of significant and relatively large differences at each of the follow-up assessments in the ways mothers managed food refusal (see Table 5) that support speculation that the intervention was potentially effective in reducing maternal anxiety related to food parenting. Intervention mothers were 1.7 times more likely to allow their child to take responsibility for how much to eat and less likely to be concerned about their child’s weight status [41]. Although at 2 years of age there were no group differences in the proportion of children reported to often/very often refuse food (22%), intervention mothers were significantly more likely to report that their child was “easy to feed” and to report less FF. In response to food refusal, they were much less likely to insist that the child eats, offer alternate liked foods, use rewards, disguise foods or play games and more likely to accept that the child was not hungry, simply take the food away and offer no more food until the next usual snack/mealtime [31, 42, 55] (Table 5). The results consistently suggest that intervention mothers were more likely to use the “trust” [22] model and avoid using a range of coercive feeding practices that arguably contribute to conflict in the feeding dynamic. Process evaluation indicated that the intervention was well accepted, with 98% of participants indicating they would recommend NOURISH, and 99% found the information to be very useful/useful. 85% of participants reported that the intervention helped them “a lot” to feel more confident about child feeding, and 95% reported that it helped them to trust their child eats enough [62].
Overall, these results show that mothers (first-time at least) welcome and respond to anticipatory guidance on food parenting and that such guidance not only enhances maternal confidence but is able to modify maternal feeding practices with positive child outcomes. It is plausible that the intervention was associated with reduced anxiety and conflict and enhanced maternal confidence and well-being.
Further Considerations
With changes to the gender-based divisions of responsibilities for employment and parenting within families and society at large, fathers have an increasingly important role in early feeding. However, to date research into parental feeding practices has largely focussed on mothers [63]. Our unpublished data comparing feeding practices (using the Child Feeding Questionnaire [51]) in 70 parent pairs indicated that, compared to mothers, although fathers feel less responsible for child feeding, they are more concerned about child weight status and appear to more frequently use relatively controlling and, hence, suboptimal feeding practices. Other studies suggest that fathers of pre-schoolers more often used “insistence on eating” and food to reward good behaviour, while mothers more often used “positive persuasion” to eat and a range of strategies to enhance dietary quality (e.g., “snack limits”) [64, 65]. This discordance in food parenting has potential to contribute to parental conflict and stress. Whilst the importance of fathers in child feeding must not be forgotten, it is critical that interventions do not exacerbate conflict related to feeding and are explicitly designed to support parents to work together to achieve positive intervention outcomes. Cultural and ethnic background and a range of socio-demographic factors are likely to influence the roles of mothers and fathers in child rearing and feeding, and ensuring diversity in parents participating in interventions will be critical to building a robust evidence base for the role of early feeding practices of both parents.
Conclusion
Parent-child interactions related to feeding are central to the fabric of daily family life and contribute to all aspects of child development, health and well-being. Child eating behaviours are in part heritable, are influenced by a range of child characteristics and reflect normal developmental stages. They are both responsive to and drive parent feeding style and practices. Parents frequently misinterpret developmentally normal child eating behaviours, such as food refusal, as cause for concern and anxiety and respond with coercive feeding practices (pressure, restriction, emotional feeding). Clinical experience indicates that parents, in an attempt to just get a few more mouthfuls of food into their toddler, can resort to quite bizarre feeding practices that are a source of stress and distress for both parent and child. These parent-centred authoritarian practices may be well intentioned but are both counterproductive and associated with poor outcomes for child health, including development of food preferences and appetite regulation, which lay the foundation for life-long healthy eating habits and chronic disease risk. Furthermore, it is plausible that stress and conflict around feeding may generalise to the broader parent-child interactions and family dynamic and impact on family happiness.
Overall, there is evidence that food parenting can be improved with a potential to positively influence child eating behaviour, diet quality and weight status and, in the longer term, reduce chronic disease risk. It is important that interventions take a strengths-based approach and explicitly support parents to cooperate rather than exacerbate any discordance in feeding practices. Furthermore, given the central role that feeding and eating play in the parent-child interactions (particularly in young children), and indeed within the broader family and cultural contexts, it could be argued that effective food parenting contributes to healthy and happy children and families.
Acknowledgements
We acknowledge the NOURISH investigators, staff, students and participants. NOURISH was funded from 2008 to 2014 by 2 consecutive grants from the Australian National Health Medical Research Council. Additional funding was provided by H.J. Heinz, Meat & Livestock Australia, Department of Health South Australia, Food Standards Australia New Zealand and Queensland University of Technology. We thank Dr Rebecca Perry for her contribution to the development of the NOURISH intervention content and materials.
Disclosure Statement
The writing of this article was supported by Nestlé Nutrition Institute and the author declares no other conflicts of interest.