Children Whose Parents Spend More Time Preparing Dinner Eat More Made-from-Scratch Meals

Author:

Martins Carla Adriano12ORCID,Santos Luara dos3,Oliveira Mariana Fernandes Brito de1,Baraldi Larissa Galastri24ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Food and Nutrition, Multidisciplinary Center UFRJ-Macae, Federal University of Rio de Janeiro—UFRJ. Av. Aluizio da Silva Gomes, 50, Novo Cavaleiros, Macae 7930-560, RJ, Brazil

2. Center for Epidemiological Research in Nutrition and Health (NUPENS), School of Public Health, University of Sao Paulo. Av. Dr Arnaldo, 715, Sao Paulo 01246-904, SP, Brazil

3. Department of Nutrition, School of Public Health, University of Sao Paulo. Av. Dr. Arnaldo, 715, Sao Paulo 01246-904, SP, Brazil

4. Center for Food Studies, University of Campinas (Unicamp), Av. Albert Einstein, 291, Cidade Universitária, Campinas 13083-852, SP, Brazil

Abstract

The aim of this paper is to investigate associations between the time spent by parents preparing dinner and children’s consumption of made-from-scratch meals. We developed a cross-sectional study with 595 parent–child dyads from São Paulo, Brazil. Data were collected via telephone interviews: time spent preparing dinner and socio-demographic characteristics were obtained using a questionnaire, while food consumption was recorded via dietary recall. Crude and adjusted regression analyses were used to test associations between time spent preparing dinner and the contribution of made-from-scratch meals to children’s dinner energy intake. Parents (93.1% woman, 60.5% aged 31–41, 62.2% white, 88.4% married, 71.2% employed, 50.0% ≥ 12 years of education) spent an average of 108- and 112-min preparing dinner on weekdays and weekends, respectively. Spending more than two hours/day was positively associated with the consumption of made-from-scratch meals (β = 4.4; p = 0.035). When parents spend more time preparing dinner, their children consume more made-from-scratch meals. Given that cooking from scratch is considered healthier but takes more time, it is important that policies and interventions aimed at promoting healthier meals among children/families and avoiding overburdening women with domestic tasks are accompanied by recommendations that focus on promoting an equitable division of food work among families.

Funder

São Paulo Research Foundation

Publisher

MDPI AG

Reference40 articles.

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