Determinants of sugar‐sweetened beverage consumption in young children: a systematic review

Sugar‐sweetened beverage (SSB) consumption is associated with adverse health outcomes. Improved understanding of the determinants will inform effective interventions to reduce SSB consumption. A total of 46,876 papers were identified through searching eight electronic databases. Evidence from interv...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Mazarello Paes, V., Hesketh, K., O'Malley, C., Moore, H., Summerbell, C., Griffin, S., van Sluijs, E. M. F., Ong, K. K., Lakshman, R.
Format: Online
Language:English
Published: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2015
Online Access:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4737242/
id pubmed-4737242
recordtype oai_dc
spelling pubmed-47372422016-02-11 Determinants of sugar‐sweetened beverage consumption in young children: a systematic review Mazarello Paes, V. Hesketh, K. O'Malley, C. Moore, H. Summerbell, C. Griffin, S. van Sluijs, E. M. F. Ong, K. K. Lakshman, R. Pediatric Obesity/Nutrition Sugar‐sweetened beverage (SSB) consumption is associated with adverse health outcomes. Improved understanding of the determinants will inform effective interventions to reduce SSB consumption. A total of 46,876 papers were identified through searching eight electronic databases. Evidence from intervention (n = 13), prospective (n = 6) and cross‐sectional (n = 25) studies on correlates/determinants of SSB consumption was quality assessed and synthesized. Twelve correlates/determinants were associated with higher SSB consumption (child's preference for SSBs, TV viewing/screen time and snack consumption; parents' lower socioeconomic status, lower age, SSB consumption, formula milk feeding, early introduction of solids, using food as rewards, parental‐perceived barriers, attending out‐of‐home care and living near a fast food/convenience store). Five correlates/determinants were associated with lower SSB consumption (parental positive modelling, parents' married/co‐habiting, school nutrition policy, staff skills and supermarket nearby). There was equivocal evidence for child's age and knowledge, parental knowledge, skills, rules/restrictions and home SSB availability. Eight intervention studies targeted multi‐level (child, parents, childcare/preschool setting) determinants; four were effective. Four intervention studies targeted parental determinants; two were effective. One (effective) intervention targeted the preschool environment. There is consistent evidence to support potentially modifiable correlates/determinants of SSB consumption in young children acting at parental (modelling), child (TV viewing) and environmental (school policy) levels. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2015-08-07 2015-11 /pmc/articles/PMC4737242/ /pubmed/26252417 http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/obr.12310 Text en © 2015 The Authors. Obesity Reviews published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of World Obesity. This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
repository_type Open Access Journal
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution US National Center for Biotechnology Information
building NCBI PubMed
collection Online Access
language English
format Online
author Mazarello Paes, V.
Hesketh, K.
O'Malley, C.
Moore, H.
Summerbell, C.
Griffin, S.
van Sluijs, E. M. F.
Ong, K. K.
Lakshman, R.
spellingShingle Mazarello Paes, V.
Hesketh, K.
O'Malley, C.
Moore, H.
Summerbell, C.
Griffin, S.
van Sluijs, E. M. F.
Ong, K. K.
Lakshman, R.
Determinants of sugar‐sweetened beverage consumption in young children: a systematic review
author_facet Mazarello Paes, V.
Hesketh, K.
O'Malley, C.
Moore, H.
Summerbell, C.
Griffin, S.
van Sluijs, E. M. F.
Ong, K. K.
Lakshman, R.
author_sort Mazarello Paes, V.
title Determinants of sugar‐sweetened beverage consumption in young children: a systematic review
title_short Determinants of sugar‐sweetened beverage consumption in young children: a systematic review
title_full Determinants of sugar‐sweetened beverage consumption in young children: a systematic review
title_fullStr Determinants of sugar‐sweetened beverage consumption in young children: a systematic review
title_full_unstemmed Determinants of sugar‐sweetened beverage consumption in young children: a systematic review
title_sort determinants of sugar‐sweetened beverage consumption in young children: a systematic review
description Sugar‐sweetened beverage (SSB) consumption is associated with adverse health outcomes. Improved understanding of the determinants will inform effective interventions to reduce SSB consumption. A total of 46,876 papers were identified through searching eight electronic databases. Evidence from intervention (n = 13), prospective (n = 6) and cross‐sectional (n = 25) studies on correlates/determinants of SSB consumption was quality assessed and synthesized. Twelve correlates/determinants were associated with higher SSB consumption (child's preference for SSBs, TV viewing/screen time and snack consumption; parents' lower socioeconomic status, lower age, SSB consumption, formula milk feeding, early introduction of solids, using food as rewards, parental‐perceived barriers, attending out‐of‐home care and living near a fast food/convenience store). Five correlates/determinants were associated with lower SSB consumption (parental positive modelling, parents' married/co‐habiting, school nutrition policy, staff skills and supermarket nearby). There was equivocal evidence for child's age and knowledge, parental knowledge, skills, rules/restrictions and home SSB availability. Eight intervention studies targeted multi‐level (child, parents, childcare/preschool setting) determinants; four were effective. Four intervention studies targeted parental determinants; two were effective. One (effective) intervention targeted the preschool environment. There is consistent evidence to support potentially modifiable correlates/determinants of SSB consumption in young children acting at parental (modelling), child (TV viewing) and environmental (school policy) levels.
publisher John Wiley and Sons Inc.
publishDate 2015
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4737242/
_version_ 1613532340331479040