Publication details

Reading, sharing, creating Pinterest recipes: Parental engagement and feeding behaviors

Authors

GUIDRY Jeanine P. D. MILLER Carrie A. HAYES Rashelle KŠIŇAN Albert CARLYLE Kellie E. FUEMMELER Bernard F.

Year of publication 2023
Type Article in Periodical
Magazine / Source Appetite
MU Faculty or unit

Faculty of Science

Citation
Web https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0195666322003786?via%3Dihub
Doi http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.appet.2022.106287
Keywords CHILDHOOD OBESITY; HEALTH CRISIS; QUESTIONNAIRE; VALIDATION; INSTAGRAM; PRESSURE
Description Pediatric overweight and obesity are associated with serious health concerns both during childhood and in adulthood. Visual social media platform Pinterest is often used to curate recipe content, but little is known about how, if at all, parents use the platform as a resource for meal planning for their families. This study focused on (1) describing how Pinterest using parents use the platform related to recipe searches and meal planning and (2) examining the association between parental feeding behaviors and frequency of Pinterest use related to recipes. Survey research firm Qualtrics was used to collect a nationwide sample of 659 Pinterest-using parents with children between ages 3-11 years of age. Data collection was initiated and completed in February of 2019. Measures included both parent and child demographics, Pinterest recipe use and engagement, and parental feeding practices using the Child Feeding Questionnaire (CFQ). Results showed that 26.9% of the respondents reported using Pinterest daily to read recipes, 17.9% to share recipes; 14.9% to comment on recipes on Pinterest; 10.3% reported creating and posting new recipes; and 13.8% mentioned making a recipe they find on Pinterest daily. Pinterest engagement was significantly negatively associated with parental age and with income insecurity, while positively associated with level of education. Hispanic participants showed higher levels of engagement as compared to White non-Hispanic participants. Among the CFQ subscales, Pressure and Perceived responsibility were significantly positively associated with Pinterest engagement while Monitoring and Restriction were not.

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