Effects of Family-Centered Media Literacy Training on Family Nutrition Outcomes

被引:10
|
作者
Austin, Erica Weintraub [1 ]
Austin, Bruce W. [2 ]
Kaiser, C. Kit [1 ]
机构
[1] Washington State Univ, Edward R Murrow Coll Commun, Edward R Murrow Ctr Media & Hlth Promot Res, Goertzen Commun Addit 101, Mail Code 2520, Pullman, WA 99164 USA
[2] Washington State Univ, Dept Kinesiol & Educ Psychol, Mail Code 2136, Pullman, WA 99164 USA
基金
美国食品与农业研究所;
关键词
Parents; Youth; Dietary; Media literacy; Health literacy; Family; Marketing; Intervention; Communication; Decision making; TELEVISION; FOOD; ADVERTISEMENTS; PREVENTION; RESPONSES; PRODUCTS; CHILDREN; OBESITY;
D O I
10.1007/s11121-020-01101-x
中图分类号
R1 [预防医学、卫生学];
学科分类号
1004 ; 120402 ;
摘要
Parents frustrated about food marketing influences need media management skills to challenge marketing messages and interpret factual content. We tested a media literacy-based, family-centered intervention to reduce effects of appealing, but unrealistic, food marketing. We hypothesized that participation would facilitate family discussion that improves the home dietary environment and increases youth consumption of fruits and vegetables. Parent-child (age 9-14) dyads (N = 189) participated in a matched-group, pretest/posttest field experiment testing a 6-week media literacy-based curriculum. Hypothesis testing employed multiple analysis of covariance and Bayesian multigroup structural equation modeling (MGSEM). Improved nutrition outcomes for parents included talk with youth about food nutrition labels (d = 0.343) and ratio of healthy to unhealthy food in home (d = 0.232); youth improved talk with parent about food nutrition labels (d = 0.211), vegetables eaten yesterday (d = 0.264), and fruit eaten yesterday (d = 1.386). Bayesian MGSEM revealed that in the intervention group, 12 of 17 tested paths were significant (p < .05), compared with only 4 in the control group, with average effect size magnitudes of 0.236 and 0.113, respectively. Media literacy education can empower parents and improve youths' critical thinking to reduce negative effects of food marketing on families and improve use of media to obtain nutrition information that aids dietary choices. This approach reduces the risk for reactance from youth who like media and resist limiting media use, while helping families use media together to make better nutrition decisions.
引用
收藏
页码:308 / 318
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Effects of Family-Centered Media Literacy Training on Family Nutrition Outcomes
    Erica Weintraub Austin
    Bruce W. Austin
    C. Kit Kaiser
    Prevention Science, 2020, 21 : 308 - 318
  • [2] Youth Perspectives on the Effects of a Family-centered Media Literacy Intervention to Encourage Healthier Eating
    Austin, Erica Weintraub
    Austin, Bruce W.
    Power, Thomas G.
    Parker, Louise
    Kaiser, C. Kit
    Edwards, Zena
    HEALTH COMMUNICATION, 2024, 39 (01) : 122 - 135
  • [3] An examination of the effects of family-centered early intervention on child and family outcomes
    Mahoney, G
    Bella, JM
    TOPICS IN EARLY CHILDHOOD SPECIAL EDUCATION, 1998, 18 (02) : 83 - 94
  • [4] LEARNING TOGETHER: A FAMILY-CENTERED LITERACY PROGRAM
    Sink, David W., Jr.
    Parkhill, Molly A.
    Marshall, Rick
    COMMUNITY COLLEGE JOURNAL OF RESEARCH AND PRACTICE, 2005, 29 (08) : 583 - 590
  • [5] What Is the Future of Family Outcomes and Family-Centered Services?
    Bailey, Donald B.
    Raspa, Melissa
    Fox, Leslie C.
    TOPICS IN EARLY CHILDHOOD SPECIAL EDUCATION, 2012, 31 (04) : 216 - 223
  • [6] Outcomes of family-centered residential treatment
    Landsman, MJ
    Groza, V
    Tyler, M
    Malone, K
    CHILD WELFARE, 2001, 80 (03) : 351 - 379
  • [7] Effects of family-centered parent training for a young child with autism
    Kamiyama, Tsutomu
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLOGY, 2016, 51 : 75 - 75
  • [8] Is Family-Centered Care Reaily Family-Centered in the Newborn Nursery?
    Beal, Judy A.
    MCN-THE AMERICAN JOURNAL OF MATERNAL-CHILD NURSING, 2016, 41 (03) : 187 - 187
  • [9] The Impact of Randomized Family-Centered Interventions on Family-Centered Outcomes in the Adult Intensive Care Unit: A Systematic Review
    Wang, Gary
    Antel, Ryan
    Goldfarb, Michael
    JOURNAL OF INTENSIVE CARE MEDICINE, 2023, 38 (08) : 690 - 701