Families, Food, and Parenting

Families, Food, and Parenting
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Integrating Research, Practice and Policy
 eBook
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Artikel-Nr:
9783030564582
Veröffentl:
2021
Einband:
eBook
Seiten:
190
Autor:
Lori A. Francis
Serie:
11, National Symposium on Family Issues
eBook Typ:
PDF
eBook Format:
Reflowable eBook
Kopierschutz:
Digital Watermark [Social-DRM]
Sprache:
Englisch
Beschreibung:

This book examines the many roles of families in their members' food access, preferences, and consumption. It provides an overview of factors - from micro- to macro-levels - that have been linked to food insecurity and discusses policy approaches to reducing food insecurity and hunger. In addition, it addresses the links between food insecurity and overweight and obesity. The book describes changes in the U.S. food environment that may explain increases in obesity during recent decades. It explores relationships between parenting practices and the development of eating behaviors in children, highlighting the importance of family mealtimes in healthful eating. The volume provides an overview of efforts to prevent or reduce obesity in children, with attention to minority populations and discusses research findings on targets for obesity prevention, including a focus on fathers as change agents who play a crucial, yet understudied, role in food parenting. The book acknowledges that with the current obesigenic environment in the United States and elsewhere around the world, additional and innovative efforts are needed to foster healthful eating behavior and orientations toward food in childhood and in families. This book is a must-have resource for researchers, professors, clinicians, professionals, and graduate students in developmental psychology, family studies, public health as well as numerous interrelated disciplines, including sociology, demography, social work, prevention science, educational policy, political science, and economics. 

This book examines the many roles of families in their members’ food access, preferences, and consumption. It provides an overview of factors – from micro- to macro-levels – that have been linked to food insecurity and discusses policy approaches to reducing food insecurity and hunger. In addition, it addresses the links between food insecurity and overweight and obesity. The book describes changes in the U.S. food environment that may explain increases in obesity during recent decades. It explores relationships between parenting practices and the development of eating behaviors in children, highlighting the importance of family mealtimes in healthful eating. The volume provides an overview of efforts to prevent or reduce obesity in children, with attention to minority populations and discusses research findings on targets for obesity prevention, including a focus on fathers as change agents who play a crucial, yet understudied, role in food parenting. The book acknowledges that with the current obesigenic environment in the United States and elsewhere around the world, additional and innovative efforts are needed to foster healthful eating behavior and orientations toward food in childhood and in families.

This book is a must-have resource for researchers, professors, clinicians, professionals, and graduate students in developmental psychology, family studies, public health as well as numerous interrelated disciplines, including sociology, demography, social work, prevention science, educational policy, political science, and economics. 

Part I. Family Ecologies of Food Insecurity.- Chapter 1. Relations Between Structural and Social Adversity and Food Insecurity in Families with Young Children.- Chapter 2. Factors Shaping Rural Residents’ Experiences of Food Insecurity and Coping Strategies.- Chapter 3. How SNAP Reduces Food Insecurity.Part II. Family Ecologies of Eating Behaviors.- Chapter 4. The Power of Family Mealtimes in Promoting Health and Well-Being.- Chapter 5. Feeding Styles and Child Eating Behaviors: An Observational and Questionnaire Approach to Childhood Obesity.- Chapter 6. Mixed-Methods Assessment of Parental and Familial Factors and Associations with Child Weight and Weight-Related Behaviors.Part III. Family Ecologies of Overweight and Obesity in Youth.- Chapter 7. Culturally Relevant Interventions with Overweight and Obese African American Children and Adolescents.- Chapter 8. Fathers and Food Parenting: Current Research and Future Opportunities.Part IV. Future Directionsfor Research.- Chapter 9: An Ecological Framework and Novel Methodologies to Address the Intersection of Families and Food.

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