Pre-school children’s emotional eating partly shaped by innate food drive, research shows

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New research at Aston University is helping to unpick the complex connections between the eating habits of children and their mothers.

The research, by Ph.D. student Rebecca Stone, surveyed 185 mothers of young children aged between three and five, asking about their eating habits and those of their children. The findings are published in the Journal of the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics.

Children pick up lots of behaviors by copying their parents—and this is true of their eating habits as well. The aim of the new research was to see how much of children’s emotional eating is explained by the way mothers use food as part of their parenting practices as well as the children’s own attitudes to food more generally.

“Emotional eating” is when we turn to food, such as cakes, chocolate and snacks, not because we’re hungry but to compensate for when we’re feeling sad, low or anxious. The survey included questions for mothers about how much they and their children ate in response to emotional states. It also asked about how much children were motivated by food and driven to eat or ask for food throughout the day, which is known as “food approach” behavior.

Stone also asked mothers about the feeding practices that they used with their children—in particular about whether they used food to reward children for good behavior, or visibly restricted their child’s access to foods, for example having foods in the house but forbidding them. These practices have been shown to make children more interested in food and have also been linked to greater emotional eating in children.

When Stone analyzed the responses, she found that children who were very motivated by food were more likely to pick up emotional eating behavior from their parents. Stone used a complex statistical method, known as moderated mediation analysis, to decipher how the different aspects of the relationship interacted: emotional eating in the mother, how she parented the child around food, the child’s food approach tendencies and emotional eating.

Professor Claire Farrow, who was one of Stone’s Ph.D. supervisors at Aston University, said: “This study demonstrates that the way that children develop eating behaviors is very complex, and that emotional eating appears to be shaped in part by an innate drive towards food.

“In this study we found that parenting practices interact with children’s eating tendencies and that children who are the most driven to approach food are the most influenced by feeding practices that can lead to emotional eating. These findings suggest that a ‘one size fits all’ approach to child feeding isn’t always appropriate and that some children are more susceptible to the influence of behaviors that can lead to emotional eating.”

Stone agreed: “Our findings suggest that children who were more motivated to eat were more predisposed to associate food with emotions. Our research supports the idea that emotional eating is a learned behavior which children often develop in pre-school years, but that some children are more vulnerable to developing emotional eating than others”

Although common amongst parents, the research also highlights that using food as a reward or visibly restricting the child’s access to certain foods—even in children as young as three—can be problematic. Giving a piece of chocolate as a reward or telling children they can only have one biscuit as a “treat” is likely to create an emotional response in the child which they then connect to those foods.

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