Unhealthy childhood behaviours, including intake of nutrient-poor foods and insufficient physical activity, may contribute to excess weight gain, suboptimal growth and development and chronic disease(Reference Anderson and Butcher1–Reference Sisson, Broyles and Baker3). It is important to understand the influence of key environments in which young children spend substantial time and engage with significant caregivers on nutrition and physical activity. Childcare providers are in strategic positions, as many children spend substantial amounts of time in their care, and they may have a strong influence on these obesogenic behaviours(Reference Birch and Roberts2,Reference Nahikian-Nelms4) . Family Child Care Homes (FCCH) are a unique childcare context compared with centre-based care, since FCCH serve a varied age range of children in a single space; are primarily conducted in a home-based setting; typically have a single owner/caregiver, though some may have additional staff and do not have food service staff(5). Moreover, children who receive care at FCCH may be at increased risk for overweight/obesity(Reference Swyden, Sisson and Lora6), and FCCH are frequently used by low-income families due to flexible hours and lower costs(Reference Burstein and Layzer7).
To support childcare providers serving low-income children, the United States food programme reimburses qualifying providers for food costs and provides best practice recommendations. Approximately 78 % of the FCCH in the USA participate in the food programme(8,9) . Food programme participation is associated with children’s enhanced nutrition(Reference Williams, Sisson and Padasas10) and best practices(Reference Williams, Sisson and Padasas10,Reference Loth, Shanafelt and Davey11) . However, there are variations in the fidelity with which the food programme is implemented in FCCH and centre-based programmes(Reference Williams, Sisson and Padasas10). Implementation variations may be the result of provider training(Reference Loth, Shanafelt and Davey11), nutrition and food programme knowledge(Reference Tovar, Mena and Risica12) or self-efficacy.
FCCH are meeting some desired best practices, such as serving fruits and vegetables daily(Reference Loth, Shanafelt and Davey11,Reference Tovar, Risica and Mena14,Reference Erinosho, Hales and Vaughn15) . Jiang et al. (Reference Jiang, Tovar and Risica13) report that some FCCH attitudes toward meal environments and foods served align with the food programme requirements and aspirational best practices, but there are opportunities to strengthen alignment and more research is needed. Previous research demonstrates that provider feeding and mealtime practices can positively or negatively influence children’s dietary intake and willingness to try foods(Reference Anundson, Sisson and Anderson16–Reference Hendy19). Higher quality FCCH-level nutrition policies are related to children’s healthier dietary intake(Reference Ward, Vaughn and Burney20) and underscore the importance of this child care setting. However, few studies describe FCCH provider food programme knowledge and nutrition and feeding self-efficacy and barriers that may influence the foods served and mealtime best practices.
Along with providing adequate nutrition, providers must facilitate physical activity, and provider physical activity, attitudes and beliefs can influence children’s movement(Reference Copeland, Kendeigh and Saelens21,Reference Ward, Belanger and Donovan22) . Higher quality FCCH-level physical activity policies are related to higher levels of daily physical activity(Reference Trost, Ward and Senso23). However, there is substantial room for improving health practices, especially regarding physical activity(Reference Loth, Shanafelt and Davey11,Reference Erinosho, Hales and Vaughn15,Reference Dev, Williams and Iruka24) , which are less consistently emphasised in state licensure policy(Reference Cradock, O’Donnell and Benjamin25). Unlike nutrition, there is no financial incentive for adequate physical activity in childcare. Currently, evidence is inconclusive as to the influence of the FCCH physical activity environment(Reference Mazzucca, Neshteruk and Burney26). Other research in centre-based programmes has found that access to play equipment, outdoor spaces and provider engagement in child physical activity is generally associated with higher levels of physical activity in young children(Reference Mazzucca, Neshteruk and Burney26). A recent review of state licensing standards reported that 27 % of the Caring for our Children recommendations for physical activity, safety and outdoor play were met by FCCH(Reference Cradock, O’Donnell and Benjamin25). However, FCCH had few written policies regarding nutrition and physical activity compared with centre-based programmes(Reference Erinosho, Hales and Vaughn15). Limited policy and training opportunities may be a potential explanation for low adherence(Reference Loth, Shanafelt and Davey11,Reference Erinosho, Hales and Vaughn15) . Therefore, FCCH play a critical role in the development of children in their care as the sole nutrition and physical activity provider during hours in care.
FCCH with multiple staff members may be at an advantage of meeting nutrition and physical activity practices and having higher self-efficacy and lower barriers due to the additional support within this care setting. The additional staff may provide additional supervision and attention to children, while others prepare meals, which may deter against sedentary activities (e.g. screen-time) and promote physical activity. On the other hand, more staff could deter these best practices with additional staff members to model and reinforce unhealthy behaviours. This critical component of administering and demonstrating healthy practices is unique to FCCH with implications for future training and administration within this context.
Taken together, the first aim of the current study is to characterise FCCH nutrition and physical activity practices, policies, nutrition self-efficacy and barriers and food programme knowledge in a sample of FCCH providers in Oklahoma. The second aim of the current study explores these differences by additional staff, with the hypothesis that FCCH providers with additional staff may be more likely to meet nutrition and physical activity best practices than are FCCH providers without additional staff.
Materials and methods
Study design
The current study examined baseline measures of Happy Healthy Homes, a randomised attention-matched controlled trial of FCCH providers, described elsewhere(Reference Sisson, Salvatore and Hildebrand27). Providers were recruited through food programme sponsoring organisations and direct phone calls to FCCH. Inclusion criteria were participation in the food programme, serving at least one child who was 2-to-5 years old, being located within 60 miles of the metro area, and planning to remain in business for at least 12 months. Recruitment goals were based on the necessary power for the intervention effect(Reference Sisson, Salvatore and Hildebrand27). A financial incentive of $30 was provided for baseline. Data were collected between October 2017 and November 2018.
Measures
Providers completed online or paper surveys to ascertain FCCH provider demographic characteristics, nutrition and physical activity practices and policies, nutrition self-efficacy and barriers and food programme knowledge. Providers shared time spent in FCCH food preparation (open-ended), types of food preparation methods (checklist), timing of meal preparation (checklist) and what children do during meal preparation (open-ended). While it is not possible to fully remove social desirability bias, providers were encouraged to provide honest answers. Participants were reminded by a trained research assistant that their responses would remain confidential and that there were ‘no right or wrong answers’ to surveys.
Nutrition and physical activity best practices
Nutrition and physical activity practices and policies were reported using the validated FCCH Nutrition and Physical Activity Self-Assessment(Reference Ward, Morris and McWilliams28). The nutrition and physical activity components include forty-three and sixteen questions, respectively. Each item has four response options, each with a possible best practice. The response items are scored as one through four, with four being the best practice for the individual item. Example questions and response items follow. An example nutrition item is, ‘My program offers fruit:’ with response options ‘≤3 times/week’ (1 point), ‘4 times/week’ (2 points), ‘once/d’ (3 points) and ‘≥2 times/d’ (4 points/best practice). An example of physical activity item is ‘The amount of time I provide for children’s indoor and outdoor physical activity each day is’ with response options ‘<60 min/d’ (1 point), ‘60–74 min/d’ (2 points), ‘75–89 min/d’ (3 points) and ‘≥90 min/d’ (4 points/best practice). The prevalence of individual best practices and best practices within survey sections were calculated. There are seven nutrition sections and five physical activity sections. Scores for the overall instrument and scores within each section were averaged and summed.
Nutrition self-efficacy and barriers
Provider nutrition self-efficacy (eighteen questions) and barriers (twenty questions) were evaluated(Reference Risica, Tovar and Palomo29). An example item assessing self-efficacy is “How sure are you that you can serve the children vegetables 2 or more time a day?” Response options included “not at all sure,” “a little sure,” “sure” and very sure.” An example item assessing barriers is “You have enough time to prepare healthy food as often as you would like?” Response options included “agree a lot,” “agree a little,” “neither agree or disagree,” “disagree a little” and “disagree a lot.” Likert response options were given numerical values and summed across respective sections. Appropriate items were reverse scored. The possible range of scores for self-efficacy was 0–18, with a higher score indicating higher self-efficacy (Cronbach’s α = 0·84). “Sure” and “very sure” responses were collapsed for reporting self-efficacy. The possible range of scores for barriers was 20–60, with a lower score indicating fewer barriers (Cronbach’s α = 0·70). “Agree a little” and “agree a lot” were collapsed for reporting.
Food programme knowledge
Fourteen questions evaluated the provider’s knowledge specific to the food programme requirements and best practices(30). Example knowledge questions are, ‘Avoiding any fruit juice is a best practice (yes/no);’ ‘Family-style meal service requires that the full portion be on the child’s plate’ (true/false). The sum of correct answers and overall percent of accuracy were calculated. The possible range of scores was 0–13, with a higher score indicating higher food programme knowledge.
Data analysis
A total of fifty-one providers were recruited. Two did not provide complete study responses and were removed from analyses, yielding an analytical sample size of forty-nine FCCH providers. For aim one, central tendencies were calculated, and normality was assessed with a Shapiro–Wilk test for variables (food programme knowledge, nutrition self-efficacy and barriers, nutrition and physical activity practices and policies) due to non-normal distribution of variables. Free-response options for what children do while the provider prepares meals were examined for content and categorised into the following categories: free play, watch TV, directed learning activity, exercise and help get ready for the meal (set table, wash hands, etc.). For aim two, a χ 2 or Fisher’s exact analysis (categorical data) or an independent t-test (parametric data) or Wilcoxon rank sum test (non-parametric data) was used to evaluate differences between providers with and without additional staff. The α level was examined at <0·01 to reduce error from multiple comparisons. All analyses were conducted using SAS 9.4.
Results
Demographic characteristics
All participants were women. Participants were 51·0 % Non-Hispanic White, 30·6 % Non-Hispanic Black, 2·0 % Hispanic, 4·1 % America Indian/Alaska Native and 44·2 ± 14·2 years of age (Table 1). Slightly over half (n 26, 53·1 %) of providers had additional staff. Overall, providers spent 2·0 h/d in food preparation, predominantly the night before (46·9 %), in the morning before (55·1 %) and after the children arrived (71·4 %). There were no demographic differences between providers with and without additional staff, with one exception (Table 1). Providers with additional staff cared for more children than did those without (median of 12 v. 7, P = 0·0012), which was anticipated as larger programmes require more staff to maintain licensing ratios. Providers utilised a variety of food preparation methods, besides deep-frying, and many believed that the food programme helped them provide healthier meals for children (91·8 %). As shown in Fig. 1, the most common activity in which children participated during meal preparation was free play, followed by watching TV, directed learning activities, helping get ready for the meal and engaging in exercise.
† Participants could write in open response.
‡ Participants could select multiple response options.
§ t-test for independent means.
‖ Wilcoxon.
¶ Fisher’s exact.
†† χ 2.
Continuous data are reported as means ± sd or medians (25th, 75th percentile) and analysed using t-test for independent means or Wilcoxon Rank Sum, as appropriate.
Statistical significance was examined at alpha < 0·05 (*) and < 0·01 (**), to account for multiple analyses.
Nutrition and physical activity practices, nutrition self-efficacy and barriers and food programme knowledge
Table 2 shows the numerical score and prevalence of meeting aspirational best practices for each section and each individual practice. The prevalence of meeting nutrition best practices was poorest for feeding environment (no FCCH met best practices for the entire section) and highest for menu and variety (43·8 % met best practices for the entire section). The prevalence of meeting physical activity best practices was lowest for indoor play equipment (4·1 % met best practices for the entire section) and highest for daily physical activity practices (16·7 % met best practices for the entire section, Table 2). The average nutrition practices score was 3·2 ± 0·3 (max 4·0). The sum nutrition practices score was 137·5 ± 12·6 (possible range 43 minimum – 172 maximum; Table 2). The average physical activity practices score was 3·0 ± 0·5 (max 4·0). The sum physical activity practices score was 48·4 ± 7·5 (possible range 16 minimum – 64 maximum; Table 2). There were no differences between FCCH with and without additional staff.
† χ 2.
‡ Fisher’s exact test.
§ t-test (equal variances).
‖ Wilcoxon.
Statistical significance was examined at alpha < 0·05 (*) and < 0·01 (**), to account for multiple analyses.
IQR is reported as 25th and 75th percentiles.
The median self-efficacy score was 16·0 out of 18; a higher score indicates higher self-efficacy (Table 3). Providers with additional staff (56 %) were more likely to report self-efficacy in serving meals family style than were those without additional staff (17·4 %; P < 0·01). However, serving meals family style had the lowest self-efficacy (37·5 % overall) across all eighteen items. The majority of providers (85·7–95·9 %) were confident they could provide praise, keep the TV off during meals and provide aspirational best practice nutrition, with the exception of serving vegetables ≥2/d. Areas with lower, yet still quite strong, self-efficacy were serving vegetables 2≥ times/d (77·1 %), letting children decide how much to eat (62·5 %) and leading a planned nutrition lesson (75·5 %).
† χ 2.
‡ Fisher’s exact test.
§ t-test for two independent means (equal variances).
‖ Wilcoxon rank sum test.
Statistical significance was examined at alpha < 0·05 (*) and < 0·01 (**), to account for multiple analyses.
IQR is reported as 25th and 75th percentiles.
Considering barriers, the mean barriers score was 33·9 ± 5·3 (possible range of 20 to 60), with a lower score indicating fewer barriers (Table 3). Many providers reported barriers within food served and the meal environment, but many were able to provide healthy beverage options and nutrition education. The areas with the fewest barriers included knowing how to talk to children about healthy foods (12·5 %), service of water (12·2 %), concern with ability to limit juice (8·2 %) and knowing how to encourage children to try new foods (6·2 %). The areas with the largest barriers included children deciding the right amount to eat (73·5 %), concerns with food waste because children will not eat healthy foods (53·1 %), picky eaters do not like healthy foods (51·0 %), fresh produce spoils too quickly (63·3 %) and fresh produce is too expensive (59·2 %). There were no differences in barriers between FCCH with and without additional staff.
The majority of providers (79·6 %) were ‘confident’ (40·8 %) or ‘really confident’ (38·8 %); they could meet food programme best practices. Only one provider (2·0 %) was ‘not confident,’ while the remainder were ‘kind of confident’ (18·4 %), indicating that providers were confident in their ability to meet food programme best practices. However, the median food programme best practice knowledge score was 9·0 (IQR: 7·0, 10·0) out of 13, and the median percent accuracy was 69 %, which is lower than desired.
As for aim two, there were no statistically significant differences between providers with and without additional staff for nutrition and physical activity practices, nutrition self-efficacy and barriers or food programme knowledge (data not shown, P > 0·01).
Discussion
The current study’s purpose was to characterise nutrition and physical activity best practices along with nutrition self-efficacy, barriers and food programme knowledge of FCCH providers and explore if there were differences with and without additional staff. In the current study, few met all nutrition or physical activity best practices, although the average scores for nutrition and physical activity ranged from 3·0 to 3·2 (out of 4). These results align with previous reports using self-reported(Reference Loth, Shanafelt and Davey11,Reference Dev, Williams and Iruka24,Reference Gans, Tovar and Jiang31) and direct observation(Reference Erinosho, Hales and Vaughn15,Reference Ward, Vaughn and Burney20,Reference Mazzucca, Neshteruk and Burney26,Reference Tovar, Benjamin-Neelon and Vaughn32) methodologies, confirming the importance of working within this setting to understand the role of the nutrition environment and develop efforts to enhance FCCH nutrition and physical activity support. Many providers were confident in serving healthy beverages and providing nutrition education to children. Providers reported more barriers to food served and meal environment, which support previous literature noting that childcare providers, and FCCH specifically, report barriers and difficulty in creating supportive mealtime environments and practices(Reference Williams, Sisson and Padasas10,Reference Jiang, Tovar and Risica13) . Providers reported insufficient knowledge of the food programme best practices, but indicated they were confident in their ability to administer the food programme best practices(Reference Williams, Sisson and Padasas10). There was one difference between providers with and without additional staff, in self-efficacy around family-style meal service. Though contextual differences may exist between FCCH with and without additional staff, all providers may benefit from additional support to achieve nutrition and physical activity practices within this setting.
FCCH providers reported that they strive to serve children healthy foods, consistent with previous work(Reference Jiang, Tovar and Risica13,Reference Lindsay, Salkeld and Greaney33) . Most providers indicated that meal preparation occurred while providing care for children, emphasising the necessity of efficient and multi-tasking meal preparation. Previous studies report that 50–67 % of FCCH providers sit and eat with children(Reference Tovar, Risica and Mena14,Reference Dev, Garcia and Dzewaltowski34) , compared with only 7–13 % of our providers who report ‘always’ sitting and eating with children. Jiang et al.(Reference Jiang, Tovar and Risica13) indicate that FCCH providers believe they should sit with children at meals and eat the same food, although Hispanic providers felt this more strongly. Only 2 % of providers in the current study report Hispanic ethnicity, which perhaps addresses this disparity between the strong belief of sitting and eating with children and the low participation in this behaviour. Further, Jiang et al. (Reference Jiang, Tovar and Risica13) do not report how many providers actually did sit and eat the same foods, only that they felt they should.
The mean nutrition practices score is similar to that presented in Dev et al. (Reference Dev, Williams and Iruka24) in FCCH, although the current sample reported more barriers than were reported in 970 FCCH providers in Nebraska(Reference Dev, Garcia and Dzewaltowski34). In the current study, 28·3 % of FCCH exceeded the recommendation for juice of no more than two servings/week, which is lower than previous observation and self-reports of 41–67 % of FCCH serving excessive juice(Reference Gans, Tovar and Jiang31). Additionally, 91·8 % of FCCH in the current study agreed that if juice is limited, children will still get enough vitamins. This finding is in contrast with Jiang et al.(Reference Jiang, Tovar and Risica13) reporting that FCCH believe that if juice is limited, children will consume insufficient vitamins. Providers in our study reported less nutrition and physical activity professional development than did providers in previous studies(Reference Loth, Shanafelt and Davey11,Reference Trost, Messner and Fitzgerald35,Reference Woodward-Lopez, Kao and Kuo36) . FCCH that engage in professional development for nutrition and physical activity have environments that are more supportive of healthy eating and movement, emphasising the importance of training focused on the unique needs of FCCH providers(Reference Loth, Shanafelt and Davey11,Reference Benjamin-Neelon, Vaughn and Tovar37) .
Within nutrition best practices, there was a disconnect between meeting aspirational nutrition best practices and their self-efficacy to meet food programme guidelines and best practices. Indeed, many providers reported low adherence to nutrition best practices (36·7–53·1 %), specifically for serving fruits, vegetables and whole grains, whereas they reported high self-efficacy (77·1–97·9 %) to serve these foods. Providers did report higher adherence to aspirational best practices of limiting unhealthy foods (71·7–85·7 %) and equally high self-efficacy (91·7–95·8 %) to do so. Williams et al. (Reference Williams, Sisson and Padasas10) reported that there was no difference in meeting self-reported food programme best practices between those programmes participating in the food programme or not. This disconnect may stem from a discrepancy between required training focused on food programme compliance and training addressing optimal nutrition and best practices. Furthermore, technical assistance to implement best practices for foods served and nutrition environment in FCCH is not broadly available.
Providers reported high self-efficacy in implementing the food programme best practices. However, their actual knowledge of those best practices was rather low (69 %). Other literature has similarly described the discordance attitudes and beliefs around children nutrition and actual provider practices(Reference Nahikian-Nelms4). The food programme knowledge was lower than anticipated, as all providers are required to participate in annual food programme training. While not directly evaluating the same constructs, few met the aspirational education and professional development nutrition best practices. Participation in the food programme is associated with children’s enhanced nutrition(Reference Williams, Sisson and Padasas10) and best practices(Reference Williams, Sisson and Padasas10,Reference Loth, Shanafelt and Davey11) as measured by self-report. Therefore, the current study adds to the literature that FCCH food programme best practice knowledge can be improved, and intervention and technical assistance to enhance best practice implementation may contribute to enhanced nutrition environment.
The context of nutrition and physical activity within these settings may provide insight into these lower scores. Though FCCH providers with and without additional staff differ in the number of children served, they reported similar meal preparation techniques and activities to engage children during meal preparation. To occupy children during meal preparation, most providers reported allowing free-play, followed by watching TV. However, the ability to allow free play may depend on existing equipment; only 36·7 % of providers reported always having portable toys available. TV use during meal preparation and mealtime ranged from 25 to 53 % in our study, which is substantially higher than other studies(Reference Dev, Williams and Iruka24,Reference Mazzucca, Neshteruk and Burney26,Reference Gans, Tovar and Jiang31) . This may be due to engaging in fewer professional development activities, as in our sample only 35·4 % of providers complete professional development on children’s physical activity two times annually. Transition time between activities is often sedentary; thus, building physical activity into transitions is a viable way in which to increase overall daily movement(Reference Orlowski and Hart38). Using this time to promote physical activity could reduce time spent in sedentary behaviour, such as sitting and watching TV, further improving providers’ time spent in physical activity and sedentary behaviour best practices. Even reductions in 10 min of time spent sitting with moderate to vigorous physical activity are related to better health in this age range(Reference Hansen, Anderssen and Andersen39). Providers may believe that children are naturally active on their own and do not need additional support or encouragement, as found in another Oklahoma sample of childcare centres(Reference Kracht, Sisson and Walker40).
There were few differences between providers with and without additional staff regarding nutrition and physical activity practices. This finding is unexpected, as it seems the addition of another staff member would alter these environments, either positively or negatively. However, FCCH with additional staff are also serving more children, which may negate any benefit from additional staff. Notably, there was a disparity between FCCH with and without additional staff in a hallmark of a family meal environment, provider self-efficacy in allowing children to feed themselves (56·0 % and 17·4 % for providers with and without additional staff). This difference indicates that having additional staff permits greater provider self-efficacy in allowing children greater meal autonomy, which is essential in meeting best practices of family-style meal service. An additional staff member may provide support to supervise young children feeding themselves (e.g. pouring drinks and selecting food), though still only half of those with additional staff members felt confident in this area. Serving oneself is seen to provide benefit to fine motor skills from handling utensils, but also self-regulation skills to determine the amount needed(41). Considering the importance of fundamental motor skills and self-regulation within this age range, supporting this continued skill could have long-term implications. Opportunities to support both FCCH providers with and without additional staff to facilitate this important skill is clearly needed within this environment.
A brief discussion of study strengths and limitations is warranted. Few studies have examined the FCCH environment and provider practices due to accessibility and recruitment difficulty(Reference Ward, Vaughn and Burney42). FCCH offer a unique context distinctly different from centre-based programmes. The focus of the current study on FCCH providers is a strength and builds on the nascent body of literature in this environment. The current study also assessed a critical component of the FCCH environment, food programme knowledge, self-efficacy and barriers. Further, the current study included physical activity practices to thoroughly address child energy balance within these settings. Limitations include the cross-sectional nature of the study design, relatively small sample size of FCCH, use of self-reported measures and location in one Midwestern metropolitan area. These constraints limit evaluation of causality and generalisability and possibly limit observance of differences between groups (i.e. with and without additional staff). The sample may be subject to selection bias, where those who chose to participate may have healthier practices. Recruitment materials sought FCCH providers interested in enrolling in an intervention to improve either environmental health or nutrition environment with random treatment assignment. No data on the demographic characteristics of FCCH who did not volunteer are available for comparison. Reliance on self-reported measures is subject to social-desirability bias and thus may overestimate best practice achievement(Reference Smith, Blaser and Geno Rasmussen43). No validated instruments to evaluate the food programme knowledge or FCCH provider nutrition self-efficacy or barriers were available; however, internal consistency of the scale was acceptable (0·70–0·84). Even so, the nutrition and physical activities practices and policies tools are psychometrically strong and have been used in other studies(Reference Jiang, Tovar and Risica13,Reference Ward, Morris and McWilliams28) . FCCH provider food security status, use of public assistance programmes and personal preferences regarding nutrition and physical activity were not collected and are outside the scope of the current study.
Several practical implications and scientific research questions have emerged from the current study. One implication is the opportunity to support children’s physical activity within these transition periods of meal preparation. Opportunities to support physical activity and reduce time spent sitting could improve FCCH best practices. These changes also align with recent international guidelines on the 24-h movement cycle in young children(44) and recent changes to other state policies to support less screen time(Reference Kracht, Webster and Staiano45). Adding clear movement and screen-time guidelines to the state licensure requirements is a likely opportunity to enhance FCCH quality(Reference Lowry Warnock, Dooyema and Blanck46). A second implication is supporting FCCH in foods served and their meal environment, including methods for FCCH providers to support children serving themselves, specifically addressing barriers to children serving themselves, such as the perceptions of mess and food waste. This may be a large transition for FCCH providers, especially those without additional staff, and nutrition education professionals are encouraged to consider the context and gradual transition to support FCCH providers in adopting these changes for long-term success. Finally, the lack of awareness and knowledge of the CACFP, especially regarding best practices, is a clear area of improvement. This deficit may be due to training and education being designed for centre-based care. Despite 25 % of children receiving care in FCCH(47), many training and education programmes are designed for centre-based programmes. Actual food programme best practice knowledge was lower than anticipated, indicating the opportunity for enhanced learning opportunities that are tailored to the FCCH environment. Understanding how food programme self-efficacy and knowledge impact meeting food programme requirements and best practices would be an important next step in this research. An important area for future research is the role of FCCH providers’ food security, use of public assistance and personal dietary and physical activity habits and preferences in the inclusion of nutrition and physical activity best practices in their FCCH. Childcare teachers have a high prevalence of food insecurity(Reference Otten, Bradford and Stover48) and poor nutrition and physical activity habits(Reference Linnan, Arandia and Bateman49) and report that they often struggle with nutrition(Reference Sisson, Smith and Cheney50) and interest in physical activity(Reference Copeland, Kendeigh and Saelens21). While these studies have examined childcare teachers in general, they have not examined FCCH providers specifically, nor the impact on their FCCH environment or quality of care. A final comment regarding implications of these findings is in regard to the contextual state environment of Oklahoma and the USA. Oklahoma is a rural and suburban state. Even in the metropolitan areas, there is often ample outdoor space, and licensing requirements align with the old food programme meal pattern(5). Additionally, in the USA, ECE programmes have the support of the food programme. Consideration of how FCCH in lower income and developing countries may include best practices for nutrition and physical activity and FCCH self-efficacy and barriers warrant future exploration.
Conclusion
Few FCCH providers, with or without additional staff, met all nutrition and physical activity best practices. Providers had high self-efficacy in providing optimal nutrition and engaging in healthy feeding practices and education, although some barriers were still present. Opportunities and resources for FCCH providers to meet food programme best practices and aspirational best practices are warranted to help enhance the FCCH environment. Food programme knowledge was lower than anticipated, given that participation in the food programme was an inclusion criterion. Detailed understanding of nutrition and physical activity environment predictors, including context and staff availability, and association with child outcomes are necessary future directions. Further, interventions to enhance the health and quality of FCCH environments targeting the unique considerations of the FCCH need to be developed and evaluated. Interventions developed should consider implementation sustainability and ability to scale, as well as integration within existing childcare support infrastructure, such as resource and referral professionals and events and training opportunities coordinated by food programme sponsoring organisations. Providers may benefit from future training and continuing education developed with stronger interprofessional integration of both education and nutrition professionals to enhance FCCH health environments.
Acknowledgements
Acknowledgements: We truly appreciate the contribution and support of community partners, including Felecia Jones, LuAnn Faulkner-Schneider, Denise Anderson, Jennifer Weber, Rainbow Fleet, Worker Assistance Program Food Program and Helping Hands Food Program. We appreciate Happy Healthy Homes research team members Megan Slawinski, Johana Jarosova and Colette Vartanian for support in data collection and management. We appreciate the support of Kathy Kyler in scientific editorial review. We are deeply grateful for the participants who allowed us into their homes and wish to create healthier spaces for young children. We would also like to thank Dr. Alison Tovar for sharing her expertise and instruments regarding data collection. All individuals have given permission to be named.
Financial support:
The current study is supported by Agriculture and Food Research Initiative Grant no. 2017-68001-26355 from the USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture and the National Institute of General Medical Sciences of the National Institutes of Health under award number U54GM104938. During manuscript preparation, CLK was supported by T32DK064584 from the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases of the NIH. Any opinions, findings, conclusions or recommendations expressed in this publication are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the U.S. Department of Agriculture or the National Institute of Health.
Conflicts of interest:
Authors have no conflicts of interest to disclose.
Authorship:
S.B.S. conceptualised the study and acquired funding, supervised data curation and analyses and wrote and revised the manuscript. E.E. conducted data analyses and assisted in writing and revising the manuscript. A.S. contributed to study conceptualisation and funding acquisition and assisted in writing and revising the manuscript. J.A.S. contributed to study design and conceptualisation, supervised data analyses and assisted with writing and revising the manuscript. B.D.W. supervised and collected data, curated data, supervised project administration and assisted with writing and revising the manuscript. D.H. contributed to study design and assisted in writing and revising the manuscript. H.A.D., S.M.P., C.L.K., E.M., K.E.K. and D.S.W. collected and curated data and/or assisted in writing and revising the manuscript. All authors have read and approved the final version of the manuscript.
Ethics of human subject participation:
The current study was conducted according to the guidelines laid down in the Declaration of Helsinki, and all procedures involving research study participants were approved by the University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center Institutional Review Board (#7551). All participants provided voluntary, written informed consent prior to participation.
Supplementary material
For supplementary material accompanying this paper visit https://doi.org/10.1017/S1368980022000337