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How Low-Income Mothers With Overweight Preschool Children Make Sense of Obesity
57
Citations
39
References
2010
Year
Pediatric FeedingNutritionFamily MedicineOverweight ChildrenPublic Health NutritionOverweight Preschool ChildrenLow-income MothersObesityNutrition EducationPublic HealthHealth EducationDietetics PracticeEarly Childhood DevelopmentHealth PromotionObesity ManagementMaternal HealthChild DevelopmentChildhood ObesityChild HealthPediatricsChild NutritionYoung ChildrenMedicine
Epidemiologic and qualitative studies have found that most mothers with overweight preschool children do not think their children are overweight. This might present a challenge for clinicians who wish to address obesity in young children. To understand mothers' perceptions of their overweight children's weight, we conducted semistructured interviews with 21 mothers of overweight preschool children enrolled in Kentucky's Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children. Although these mothers did not label their children as overweight, they were worried about children's weight, particularly as it related to their emotional well-being. These worries about obesity were reflected in three central tensions that shaped the way mothers perceived their children's weight and informed maternal feeding strategies: (a) nature vs. nurture, (b) medical authority vs. lived experience, and (c) relieving immediate stress vs. preventing long-term consequences. Acknowledging mothers' concerns and tensions might help clinicians communicate more effectively with them about obesity.
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