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June 5, 2006 -- Researchers are looking into whether parentingparenting style affects kids' weight.
The June issue of the journal Pediatrics includes a study on the topic, done by Kyung Rhee, MD, of Boston University's pediatrics department, and colleagues.
They found that young children who received love and clear limits from their parents were less likely to be overweight in first grade than those whose parents had exhibited permissive, authoritarian, or neglectful parenting styles at the study's start.
ObesityObesity is a serious problem for American children. The CDC estimates 17% of U.S. children aged 2 to 17 were overweight in 2003-2004.
In their study, Rhee's team followed 872 children and their mothers. The researchers assessed parenting style when the kids were about 4 and 1/2 years old, then checked the kids' weight two years later.
They found that children of the mothers judged to be authoritarian were over four times more likely to be overweight at that point than children whose mothers set firm limits but also showed warmth and sensitivity to the child.
The link between obesity and parenting style doesn't mean parenting style determined the kids' weight. Many other issues -- including cultural influences -- need to be studied, the researchers note.
About the Study
All the moms were healthy, at least 18 years old, and could understand English. Most were living with a spouse or partner, but their spouses and partners didn't participate in the study.
More than eight in 10 of the kids were white. About half were boys.
When the children were about 4 and 1/2 years old, researchers videotaped them (with permission) interacting with their moms performing several tasks in a lab. The mothers also completed a survey about their expectations for their child's self-control.
Survey questions included:
Four Parenting Styles
The researchers focused on four parenting styles:
Based on the survey and videotapes, the researchers classified 298 moms as authoritarian, 179 as authoritative, 132 as permissive, and 263 as neglectful.
Parenting Style, Kids' Weight
Two years after the videotapes were made, when the kids were in first grade, the researchers checked data on the kids' height and weight. They found that 11% of the first-graders were overweight, based on a BMI (body mass index) in the 95th percentile or higher for their age and gender.
ObesityObesity was then correlated to parenting style. The breakdown of overweight children, based on the researchers' observations of parenting styles two years earlier, were:
Researchers made adjustments for factors such as income level, marital status, gender, and child behavioral problems.
Not Blaming the Parents
The study doesn't give a reason for the results and it doesn't blame parents for their kid's extra pounds. The results also don't prove parenting style was solely responsible for the kids' weight.
Rhee's team doesn't claim that a child's weight reveals parenting style. Overweight kids -- and children of normal weight -- can come from any background.
"It is clear that biological or genetic factors are involved in the risk for some children to become overweight," the researchers write. Researchers didn't have access to the parents' BMI.
Culture May Count
Culture may play a role in parenting style, Rhee and colleagues note. But with few minorities in their study, researchers weren't able to probe such influences.
It will take more work to learn how parenting styles -- including cultural norms and specific parenting behaviors -- affect child behavioral patterns regarding eating and activity levels, the researchers note.
A better understanding of those effects "may help to guide the development of more-comprehensive and more-effective prevention and treatment programs for overweight children," they write.
SOURCES: Rhee, K. Pediatrics, June 2006; vol 117: pp 2047-2054. CDC: "Prevalence of Overweight Among Children and Adolescents: United States, 2003-2004." News release, American Academy of Pediatrics.