PLoS ONE (Jan 2014)

Development and preliminary validation of Chinese preschoolers' eating behavior questionnaire.

  • Xun Jiang,
  • Xianjun Yang,
  • Yuhai Zhang,
  • Baoxi Wang,
  • Lijun Sun,
  • Lei Shang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0088255
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 2
p. e88255

Abstract

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BackgroundThe objective of this study was to develop a questionnaire for caregivers to assess the eating behavior of Chinese preschoolers.MethodsTo assess children's eating behaviors, 152 items were derived from a broad review of the literature related to epidemiology surveys and the assessment of children's eating behaviors. All of these items were reviewed by 50 caregivers of preschoolers and 10 experienced pediatricians. Seventy-seven items were selected for use in a primary questionnaire. After conducting an exploratory factor analysis and a variability analysis on the data from 313 preschoolers used to evaluate this primary questionnaire, we deleted 39 of these 77 items. A Chinese Preschoolers' Eating Behavior Questionnaire (CPEBQ) was finally established from the remaining 38 items. The structure of this questionnaire was explored by factor analysis, and its reliability, validity and discriminative ability were evaluated with data collected from caregivers of 603 preschoolers.ResultsThe CPEBQ consisted of 7 dimensions and 38 items. The 7 dimensions were food fussiness, food responsiveness, eating habit, satiety responsiveness, exogenous eating, emotional eating and initiative eating. The Cronbach's α coefficient for the questionnaire was 0.92, and the test-retest reliability was 0.72. There were significant differences between the scores of normal-weight, overweight and obese preschoolers when it was referred to food fussiness, food responsiveness, eating habits, satiety responsiveness and emotional eating (pConclusionsThe CPEBQ satisfies the conditions of reliability and validity, in accordance with psychometric demands. The questionnaire can be employed to evaluate the characteristics of Chinese preschoolers' eating behaviors; therefore, it can be used in child health care practice and research.