Shared weight and dietary changes in parent-child dyads following family-based obesity treatment
- PMID: 26192385
- PMCID: PMC4861083
- DOI: 10.1037/hea0000247
Shared weight and dietary changes in parent-child dyads following family-based obesity treatment
Abstract
Objectives: The primary objective was to determine whether children and their participating parents undergoing family-based behavioral treatment (FBT) for obesity show similar dietary changes following treatment, and if so, whether these shared dietary changes explain the similarity in weight change within the parent-child dyad.
Method: Data come from a randomized controlled trial of 148 parent-child dyads who completed FBT and were followed over a 2-year maintenance phase. Energy-dense, nutrient-poor foods ("RED" foods) and fruit and vegetable intake were assessed across time.
Results: Maintenance of lower RED food intake following FBT predicted weight maintenance in children and in parents (ps < .01), and dietary and weight changes were correlated within parent-child dyads (ps < .01). Most interesting, the similarity in long-term weight maintenance between children and their parents was predicted by the similarity in long-term changes in RED food intake between children and their parents (p < .001).
Conclusions: These findings point to the important role of maintaining low energy-dense, nutrient-poor food intake for long-term weight maintenance in children and parents. Furthermore, these results suggest that the correlation between parent and child weight maintenance can be explained in part by similar long-term changes in energy-dense, nutrient-poor food intake.
(c) 2015 APA, all rights reserved).
Conflict of interest statement
None of the remaining authors of this manuscript have any conflict of interest to declare.
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- Epstein LH. Development of evidence-based treatments for pediatric obesity. In: Kazdin AE, Weisz JR, editors. Evidence-Based Psychotherapies for Children and Adolescents. New York: Guilford Publications, Inc; 2003. pp. 374–388.
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