Family Structure, Family Transitions, and Child Overweight and Obesity: Comparing Australia, the United Kingdom, and the United States

Author:

Slighting Sadie A.1,Rasmussen Kirsten1ORCID,Dufur Mikaela J.1ORCID,Jarvis Jonathan A.1ORCID,Pribesh Shana L.2ORCID,Alexander Alyssa J.3ORCID,Otero Carolina4

Affiliation:

1. Department of Sociology, Brigham Young University, 2008 JFSB, Provo, UT 84602, USA

2. Department of STEM Education & Professional Studies, Old Dominion University, 2300A Education Building, Norfolk, VA 23529, USA

3. Department of Sociology, University of British Columbia, AnSo-2220, Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z2, Canada

4. United Way of Salt Lake City, 257 E 200 S, Salt Lake City, UT 84111, USA

Abstract

Growing rates of childhood obesity globally create concern for individuals’ health outcomes and demands on health systems. While many policy approaches focus on macro-level interventions, we examine how the type of stability of a family structure might provide opportunities for policy interventions at the micro level. We examine the association between family structure trajectories and childhood overweight and obesity across three Anglophone countries using an expanded set of eight family structure categories that capture biological relationships and instability, along with potential explanatory variables that might vary across family trajectories and provide opportunities for intervention, including access to resources, family stressors, family structure selectivity factors, and obesogenic correlates. We use three datasets that are representative of children born around the year 2000 and aged 11 years old in Australia (n = 3329), the United Kingdom (n = 11,542), and the United States (n = 8837) and nested multivariate multinomial logistic regression models. Our analyses find stronger relationships between child overweight and obesity and family structure trajectories than between child obesity and obesogenic factors. Children in all three countries are sensitive to living with cohabiting parents, although in Australia, this is limited to children whose parents have been cohabiting since before their birth. In the UK and US, parents starting their cohabitation after the child’s birth are more likely to have children who experience obesity. Despite a few differences across cross-cultural contexts, most of the relationship between family structures and child overweight or obesity is connected to differences in families’ access to resources and by the types of parents who enter into these family structures. These findings suggest policy interventions at the family level that focus on potential parents’ education and career prospects and on income support rather than interventions like marriage incentives.

Publisher

MDPI AG

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