3 resultados para Food habits -- Psychological aspects

em Repositório Científico do Instituto Politécnico de Lisboa - Portugal


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Mestrado em Intervenção Sócio-Organizacional na Saúde - Área de especialização: Políticas de Administração e Gestão de Serviços de Saúde.

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Barreiras parentais à alimentação saudável: 1) intrapessoais (relacionadas com a criança preferências alimentares; o estado de saúde; dificuldades de mudança de hábitos; relacionadas com os pais: baixo controlo; baixa auto-eficácia; stress parental); 2) interpessoais (comportamento da criança às refeições; estrutura da família; influências dos pares e de outros familiares; tempo disponível); 3) ambientais (escola; recursos financeiros; tempo disponível). Objetivos do estudo: identificação das barreiras percecionadas pelos pais a uma alimentação saudável da criança; identificar as estratégias de confronto que os pais utilizam para lidar com estas barreiras; identificar as diferenças das barreiras e estratégias utilizadas ao longo do desenvolvimento da criança; avaliar o grau de eficácia atribuído às estratégias utilizadas.

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Childhood excessive weight and obesity are a major public health concern from early childhood. Early childhood is an important period of development for developing healthy eating habits, that may be associated with an adequate present/future BMI. There is extensive evidence that children’s food intake is shaped by early experiences, suggesting ways in which parenting practices may be promoting obesity. But what leads parents to endorse healthier or detrimental educational practices and routines needs further study. 1. Perception of children’s weight: parents of overweight or obese children often fail to correctly perceive their children as overweight; failing to recognize their children’s excessive weight may impeach parents from implementing the best educational practices. 2. Concern: relation between the adequacy of mothers perception of their children’s weight and the level of concern - parental concern is be associated with parental practices. 3. Attribution of control: also, if parents do not consider their children’s eating behavior at least partially controllable by them, they may relinquish some of their responsibility in this area. Self-efficacy: evidence linking parental self-efficacy to parent competence and to parenting practices and behaviors; low parental self-efficacy related to the control of everyday behavior of young children may lead parents to abandon more consistent health practices and endorse permissive and inconsistent strategies. We designed 2 sequential studies that aim to contribute to the understanding of cognitive determinants of children’s eating patterns.