Instrument to identify food neophobia in Brazilian children by their caregivers

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

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Instrument to identify food neophobia in Brazilian children by their caregivers. / Almeida, Priscila Claudino de; Philippi Rosane, Beatriz; Nakano, Eduardo Yoshio; Vasconcelos, Ivana Aragão Lira; Zandonadi, Renata Puppin; Botelho, Raquel Braz Assuncão.

I: Nutrients, Bind 12, Nr. 7, 1943, 2020.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Almeida, PCD, Philippi Rosane, B, Nakano, EY, Vasconcelos, IAL, Zandonadi, RP & Botelho, RBA 2020, 'Instrument to identify food neophobia in Brazilian children by their caregivers', Nutrients, bind 12, nr. 7, 1943. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu12071943

APA

Almeida, P. C. D., Philippi Rosane, B., Nakano, E. Y., Vasconcelos, I. A. L., Zandonadi, R. P., & Botelho, R. B. A. (2020). Instrument to identify food neophobia in Brazilian children by their caregivers. Nutrients, 12(7), [1943]. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu12071943

Vancouver

Almeida PCD, Philippi Rosane B, Nakano EY, Vasconcelos IAL, Zandonadi RP, Botelho RBA. Instrument to identify food neophobia in Brazilian children by their caregivers. Nutrients. 2020;12(7). 1943. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu12071943

Author

Almeida, Priscila Claudino de ; Philippi Rosane, Beatriz ; Nakano, Eduardo Yoshio ; Vasconcelos, Ivana Aragão Lira ; Zandonadi, Renata Puppin ; Botelho, Raquel Braz Assuncão. / Instrument to identify food neophobia in Brazilian children by their caregivers. I: Nutrients. 2020 ; Bind 12, Nr. 7.

Bibtex

@article{7bcccc5d874a4b3f8ff3c6dad87fd535,
title = "Instrument to identify food neophobia in Brazilian children by their caregivers",
abstract = "This study aimed to develop a specific instrument to evaluate food neophobia focused on Brazilian children and to perform the content validation and internal semantic consistency and reproducibility evaluation of the instrument. Three steps were necessary to conduct the study: (i) development of the instrument, (ii) internal validation (content validation and semantic evaluation) of the food neophobia instrument using 22 experts in the first round and 20 of them in the second round, (iii) evaluation of the internal consistency and reproducibility of the instrument with the children{\textquoteright}s caregivers, using the test–retest (where the same caregiver -n = 22 - answered twice, with 24 h interval) and comparing responses between two caregivers (n = 44) of the same children (n = 22). We developed an instrument in Brazilian–Portuguese to evaluate children{\textquoteright}s food neophobia based on the caregivers{\textquoteright} perceptions with 25 items divided into three domains (neophobia in general, neophobia for fruits and neophobia for vegetables). Our results indicated that the instrument has excellent internal consistency (>0.9) and reproducibility (>0.9) when answered by the caregiver who knows the child{\textquoteright}s eating habits, indicating reliability to be applied in Brazil. In addition, when the two caregivers answered the instrument, we found a good reproducibility (>0.6), confirming the possibility to be answered by one of the caregivers. Further studies are necessary to complete external validation with a representative sample of the target group in Brazil, showing nationwide the profile of the population. The potential of a neophobia study would contribute to the implementation of effective strategies and guidelines to support parents and health professionals, especially those involved in health and nutrition, to identify traces of food neophobia or neophobic behavior. By accurately measuring food neophobia in children, families can prevent nutritional deficiencies throughout adolescence and adulthood, improving eating habits. Children usually have neophobias similar to the ones presented by their parents - and when early detected, these neophobias can be addressed.",
keywords = "Faculty of Science, Food neophobia, Child, Caregiver perception, Instrument",
author = "Almeida, {Priscila Claudino de} and {Philippi Rosane}, Beatriz and Nakano, {Eduardo Yoshio} and Vasconcelos, {Ivana Arag{\~a}o Lira} and Zandonadi, {Renata Puppin} and Botelho, {Raquel Braz Assunc{\~a}o}",
note = "(Ekstern)",
year = "2020",
doi = "10.3390/nu12071943",
language = "English",
volume = "12",
journal = "Nutrients",
issn = "2072-6643",
publisher = "M D P I AG",
number = "7",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Instrument to identify food neophobia in Brazilian children by their caregivers

AU - Almeida, Priscila Claudino de

AU - Philippi Rosane, Beatriz

AU - Nakano, Eduardo Yoshio

AU - Vasconcelos, Ivana Aragão Lira

AU - Zandonadi, Renata Puppin

AU - Botelho, Raquel Braz Assuncão

N1 - (Ekstern)

PY - 2020

Y1 - 2020

N2 - This study aimed to develop a specific instrument to evaluate food neophobia focused on Brazilian children and to perform the content validation and internal semantic consistency and reproducibility evaluation of the instrument. Three steps were necessary to conduct the study: (i) development of the instrument, (ii) internal validation (content validation and semantic evaluation) of the food neophobia instrument using 22 experts in the first round and 20 of them in the second round, (iii) evaluation of the internal consistency and reproducibility of the instrument with the children’s caregivers, using the test–retest (where the same caregiver -n = 22 - answered twice, with 24 h interval) and comparing responses between two caregivers (n = 44) of the same children (n = 22). We developed an instrument in Brazilian–Portuguese to evaluate children’s food neophobia based on the caregivers’ perceptions with 25 items divided into three domains (neophobia in general, neophobia for fruits and neophobia for vegetables). Our results indicated that the instrument has excellent internal consistency (>0.9) and reproducibility (>0.9) when answered by the caregiver who knows the child’s eating habits, indicating reliability to be applied in Brazil. In addition, when the two caregivers answered the instrument, we found a good reproducibility (>0.6), confirming the possibility to be answered by one of the caregivers. Further studies are necessary to complete external validation with a representative sample of the target group in Brazil, showing nationwide the profile of the population. The potential of a neophobia study would contribute to the implementation of effective strategies and guidelines to support parents and health professionals, especially those involved in health and nutrition, to identify traces of food neophobia or neophobic behavior. By accurately measuring food neophobia in children, families can prevent nutritional deficiencies throughout adolescence and adulthood, improving eating habits. Children usually have neophobias similar to the ones presented by their parents - and when early detected, these neophobias can be addressed.

AB - This study aimed to develop a specific instrument to evaluate food neophobia focused on Brazilian children and to perform the content validation and internal semantic consistency and reproducibility evaluation of the instrument. Three steps were necessary to conduct the study: (i) development of the instrument, (ii) internal validation (content validation and semantic evaluation) of the food neophobia instrument using 22 experts in the first round and 20 of them in the second round, (iii) evaluation of the internal consistency and reproducibility of the instrument with the children’s caregivers, using the test–retest (where the same caregiver -n = 22 - answered twice, with 24 h interval) and comparing responses between two caregivers (n = 44) of the same children (n = 22). We developed an instrument in Brazilian–Portuguese to evaluate children’s food neophobia based on the caregivers’ perceptions with 25 items divided into three domains (neophobia in general, neophobia for fruits and neophobia for vegetables). Our results indicated that the instrument has excellent internal consistency (>0.9) and reproducibility (>0.9) when answered by the caregiver who knows the child’s eating habits, indicating reliability to be applied in Brazil. In addition, when the two caregivers answered the instrument, we found a good reproducibility (>0.6), confirming the possibility to be answered by one of the caregivers. Further studies are necessary to complete external validation with a representative sample of the target group in Brazil, showing nationwide the profile of the population. The potential of a neophobia study would contribute to the implementation of effective strategies and guidelines to support parents and health professionals, especially those involved in health and nutrition, to identify traces of food neophobia or neophobic behavior. By accurately measuring food neophobia in children, families can prevent nutritional deficiencies throughout adolescence and adulthood, improving eating habits. Children usually have neophobias similar to the ones presented by their parents - and when early detected, these neophobias can be addressed.

KW - Faculty of Science

KW - Food neophobia

KW - Child

KW - Caregiver perception

KW - Instrument

UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nu12071943

U2 - 10.3390/nu12071943

DO - 10.3390/nu12071943

M3 - Journal article

VL - 12

JO - Nutrients

JF - Nutrients

SN - 2072-6643

IS - 7

M1 - 1943

ER -

ID: 323615446