Observations of feeding practices of US parents of young children with Down syndrome

Victoria A. Surette, Sarah Smith-Simpson, Lisa R. Fries, Ciarán G. Forde, Carolyn F. Ross*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

1 Citation (Scopus)

Abstract

Parental behaviours influence food acceptance in young children, but few studies have measured these behaviours using observational methods, especially among children with Down syndrome (CWDS). The overall goal of this study was to understand parent feeding practices used during snack time with young CWDS (N = 111, aged 11–58 months). A coding scheme was developed to focus on feeding practices used by parents of CWDS from a structured home-use test involving tasting variously textured snack products. Behavioural coding was used to categorise parental feeding practices and quantify their frequencies (N = 212 video feeding sessions). A feeding prompt was coded as successful if the child ate the target food product or completed the prompt within 20 s of the prompt being given without a refusal behaviour. CWDS more frequently consumed the test foods and completed tasks in response to Autonomy-Supportive Prompts to Eat (49.3%), than to Coercive-Controlling Prompts to Eat (24.2%). By exploring the parent–CWDS relationship during feeding, we can identify potentially desirable parent practices to encourage successful feeding for CWDS. Future research should build upon the knowledge gained from this study to confirm longitudinal associations of parent practices with child behaviours during feeding.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere13548
JournalMaternal and Child Nutrition
Volume19
Issue number4
Early online date17 Jul 2023
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Oct 2023

Keywords

  • behavioural observation
  • children
  • Down syndrome
  • eating behaviour
  • parental feeding practices
  • trisomy 21

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