How Families Can Eat Healthier

Every unhappy family might be unhappy in its own way, but when they sit down together at the table, they’re alike according to one important measure: they eat better.

A new study in JAMA Network Open finds that family dinners are associated with better nutritional intake among adolescents, regardless of how dysfunctional (or not) the family is.

Lead author Kathryn Walton, a registered dietitian and doctoral candidate in the department of family relations and applied nutrition at the University of Guelph, said that the study builds on earlier research that has established the benefits of family meals.

“We know that children who sit down for frequent family meals have better dietary intake,” she said in a phone call with Journalist’s Resource. “The novel piece of our study is we considered the role of family functioning — how well families communicate, connect emotionally and problem solve.”

The study analyzed data from the Growing Up Today Study II (GUTS), a collaboration between clinicians and researchers at Brigham and Women’s Hospital and the Harvard School of Public Health that looks at the influence of diet and exercise on weight over the course of a person’s life. GUTS participants are the children of women enrolled in the Nurses’ Health Study, which analyzes the risk factors for chronic diseases in women, using nurses as its study population. Walton’s research looked at a sample of 2,728 adolescents from the GUTS study. They were between 14 and 24 years old. Most were white — 93 percent — and, according to Walton, the participants were a “fairly high income cohort.”


innerself subscribe graphic


The researchers looked at participants’ responses to questions of how often they sat down to the table with other members of their families to eat dinner, and how many fruits and vegetables, takeout and fast food meals, and sugar sweetened beverages they consumed.

Here are the key findings:

  • “More frequent family dinners were associated with higher-quality dietary intake regardless of level of family functioning: interactions between family functioning and family dinner frequency were not significant.”
  • More specifically, female and male adolescents who had more frequent family dinners consumed more fruits and vegetables, and ate less fast food and takeout food.
  • Male participants, but not female participants, who had family dinners more often had a lower intake of sugar-sweetened beverages.

Though the effects on dietary intake were small — the difference was less than a whole serving of fruit and vegetables — Walton explained that this might have to do with the higher-income sample. She added that overall, the adolescents in the study were already consuming fairly high amounts of fruits and vegetables and low amounts of fast food. She suggested that more diverse populations might see larger differences.

She added that future research and interventions can build on this work, capitalizing on the idea that whether families are high-functioning or dysfunctional, meals together can offer benefits, and developing strategies to increase those effects.

Walton stressed the importance of developing healthy habits in adolescence, when children often put on extra weight or become obese. “Anything that can help promote healthy intake and lifestyles in that time is important. It’s a big transition time,” she said.

Walton added that further research is needed to understand the support families require to have dinners together and to test strategies to promote family meal time. But she offered a few suggestions, such as:

  • Get adolescents involved in dinner preparations: “Many hands make light work, but it also teaches important life skills.”
  • Set reasonable goals: “Start with one meal. You will reap the benefits. And as schedules allow, sit down together more often.”
  • Simplify family meals: “When we think about family meals, we often think about the big, grander events, sitting down for an hour. But that’s not realistic. So I think reminding ourselves, family meals don’t have to be — and probably shouldn’t be, for everyone’s sanity — a big to-do.” Walton suggested freezing meals ahead of time and using bagged salad for convenience.

This article originally appeared on The Journalist's Resource

About The Author

Research Reporter Chloe Reichel came to Journalist’s Resource in 2017 from the Vineyard Gazette. Her work has also appeared in Cambridge Day, the Cape Cod Times and Harvard Magazine.@chloereichel.This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

Related Books

at InnerSelf Market and Amazon