Jornal de Pediatria - Vol. 76, Supl.3, 2000 S229
S229
0021-7557/00/76-Supl.3/S229
Jornal de Pediatria
Copyright
©
2000 by Sociedade Brasileira de Pediatria
REVIEW ARTICLE
1. Student, Graduate Program in Personality and Social Psychology, PUCRS.
2. Ph.D in Psychology, associate professor, Graduate Program, School of
Psychology, PUCRS, Graduate Program in Personality and Social
Psychology.
Abstract
Objectives: review the literature, exploring factors that contribute to the development of children s
eating behavior such as the role of learning and social context.
Methods: the review of the literature was done using Medline, Psyclit, and Lilacs as resources for
assessing international and national research articles on child nutrition, with an emphasis on children s
eating behavior. These articles were revised and grouped together according to the topic.
Results: family is responsible for the development of children s eating behavior through social
learning. Parents are children s first nutritional educators. Children s eating experiences are influenced by
cultural and psychosocial factors. Social context plays a relevant role in this process, especially through
the strategies used by parents to encourage children to have a balanced diet and to eat specific foods. These
strategies may contain adequate and inadequate stimuli as to the development of children s food preference
and food intake self-control.
Conclusion: the learning process is a determining factor for children s eating behavior, and is
associated with three factors: food flavor conditioning, food postingestional consequences, and social
context. Parents are deeply concerned with the amount of food their children eat and not with the
development of more adequate habits and attitudes related to dietary quality.
J. pediatr. (Rio J.). 2000; 76 (Supl.3): S229-S237: eating behavior, children’s nutrition, food
preferences.
Development children’s eating behavior
Maurem Ramos,
1
Lilian M. Stein
2
Introduction
Food intake is one of the contributing factors to the
development of chronic degenerative diseases in humans.
These diseases are today the main cause of death among
adults.
1,2
It is agreed that changes in eating habits are
important to prevent food-related diseases and improve
people’s health. As eating habits are formed in childhood,
it is necessary that their determining factors be understood
in order to establish effective educational processes that can
change children’s eating behavior.
3-5