Food practices and employed families with younger children, 2010

OConnell, Rebecca (2020). Food practices and employed families with younger children, 2010. [Data Collection]. Colchester, Essex: UK Data Archive. 10.5255/UKDA-SN-851524

An association has been found by some researchers between overweight children and parental employment. This mixed methods study aims to examine the relationship between being an employed parent and the quality of children's diets and to understand the processes involved. The study will take into account that children's nutrition and food practices take place not only in their homes but in a range of contexts. Analysis of large scale secondary data sets (the National Diet and Nutrition Survey, Health Survey for England and Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children) will examine associations between diet and parental employment status while an intensive study of 48 higher and lower income working families sampled from the NDNS will explore the meanings and uses of food in working families, the embodiment of food practices and their embeddedness in different social contexts. This part of the study will employ a range of qualitative methods, including interviews, drawing and photo elicitation, with parents and children aged 2 to 10 to understand the social processes which influence healthier and unhealthier diets of children within and outside the home. It will thereby seek to provide explanations for statistical associations found (or not found) in the survey data.

Data description (abstract)

Qualitative longitudinal study of children's food and eating in employed families, based on and complementing secondary analysis of the National Diet and Nutrition Survey (NDNS) Year 1 (2008-2009), the Health Survey for England (HSE) (2007-2008) and the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children (ALSPAC, ‘Children of the 90’s’). A range of outcome measures was used, including a measure of overall nutrition quality, which was specifically designed for the project. Qualitative data result from case studies of 47 working families, purposively sampled from the NDNS and differentiated by income level, to study the quality of children’s diets. This part of the study sought to complement the NDNS findings and provide a fuller picture. Qualitative methods used include interviews and a range of visual methods with children, to understand the social processes which influence children both within and outside the home. Two years later, follow-up interviews (wave 2) were carried out as project "Food, families and work: taking a long view in understanding children and young people's diets".

Data creators:
Creator Name Affiliation ORCID (as URL)
OConnell Rebecca Institute of Education
Contributors:
Name Affiliation ORCID (as URL)
Brannen J Institute of Education
Sponsors: Economic and Social Research Council, Food Standards Agency
Grant reference: RES-190-25-0010
Topic classification: Health
Society and culture
Keywords: food, family, work
Project title: Food Practices and Employed Families with Younger Children
Grant holders: Rebecca OConnell, Ann Mooney, Julia Brannen
Project dates:
FromTo
1 October 200930 September 2011
Date published: 12 Feb 2015 15:36
Last modified: 12 May 2020 07:25

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