Does eating family meals and having the television on during dinner correlate with overweight? A sub-study of the PRO GREENS project, looking at children from nine European countries
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Title
Does eating family meals and having the television on during dinner correlate with overweight? A sub-study of the PRO GREENS project, looking at children from nine European countries
Authors
Keywords
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Journal
PUBLIC HEALTH NUTRITION
Volume 17, Issue 11, Pages 2528-2536
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Online
2014-03-19
DOI
10.1017/s1368980013002954
References
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Note: Only part of the references are listed.- Fruit and vegetable intake is associated with frequency of breakfast, lunch and evening meal: cross-sectional study of 11-, 13-, and 15-year-olds
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- Familial correlates of adolescent girls' physical activity, television use, dietary intake, weight, and body composition
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- Longitudinal associations between family characteristics and measures of childhood obesity
- (2011) Reetta Lehto et al. International Journal of Public Health
- Is Frequency of Shared Family Meals Related to the Nutritional Health of Children and Adolescents?
- (2011) A. J. Hammons et al. PEDIATRICS
- Food and drink intake during television viewing in adolescents: the Healthy Lifestyle in Europe by Nutrition in Adolescence (HELENA) study
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- Meal Patterns and Frequencies: Do They Affect Body Weight in Children and Adolescents?
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- Meal patterns and childhood obesity
- (2010) Bernadeta Patro et al. CURRENT OPINION IN CLINICAL NUTRITION AND METABOLIC CARE
- Prevalence and determinants of childhood overweight and obesity in European countries: pooled analysis of the existing surveys within the IDEFICS Consortium
- (2009) I Pigeot et al. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF OBESITY
- Breakfast consumption and its socio-demographic and lifestyle correlates in schoolchildren in 41 countries participating in the HBSC study
- (2009) Carine Vereecken et al. International Journal of Public Health
- Nutrition and body weights of Canadian children watching television and eating while watching television
- (2009) Tina Liang et al. PUBLIC HEALTH NUTRITION
- Television viewing, computer game play and book reading during meals are predictors of meal skipping in a cross-sectional sample of 12-, 14- and 16-year-olds
- (2009) Kathleen Custers et al. PUBLIC HEALTH NUTRITION
- Breakfast Eating and Weight Change in a 5-Year Prospective Analysis of Adolescents: Project EAT (Eating Among Teens)
- (2008) M. T. Timlin et al. PEDIATRICS
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