社会和个人对青春期前饮食的影响:朋友饮食行为和个人焦虑和抑郁的作用

L. Houldcroft, E. Haycraft, C. Farrow
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引用次数: 1

摘要

背景:朋友是形成社会规范和行为比较的重要榜样,尤其是在儿童中。这项研究调查了青春期前儿童自己的饮食行为与他们的朋友群体的饮食行为之间的相似性。该研究还评估了该年龄组的焦虑和抑郁症状是否与饮食行为有关。方法:343名儿童(平均年龄8.75岁)完成了旨在测量饮食限制、情绪性饮食和外部饮食、一般焦虑和社交焦虑以及抑郁症状的问卷调查。孩子们还提供了他们朋友圈的细节。结果:青少年前期饮食限制与朋友群体成员的饮食限制、个体焦虑和抑郁水平呈正相关。青春期前表现出的一般焦虑水平可以预测情绪和外部饮食行为。年龄较小的孩子比年龄较大的孩子更有可能报告更高水平的情绪和外部饮食,男孩比女孩更有可能报告更多的外部饮食行为。结论:这些结果表明,青少年前期的节食行为与他们的朋友报告的更多的节食行为有关。相比之下,受情绪控制的饮食水平更高,以及对外部饥饿暗示的反应,与青春期前儿童更严重的焦虑症状有关。这些发现强调了朋友对这一年龄组饮食行为的社会影响的重要性,并强调了在青春期前针对健康饮食和饮食失调预防干预的价值。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Social and individual influences on eating in preadolescents: the role of friends’ eating behaviours and individual anxiety and depression
Background: Friends are important role models for the formation of social norms and behaviour comparisons, particularly in children. This study examined the similarities between pre-adolescent children’s own eating behaviours with the eating behaviours of those in their friendship group. It also evaluated whether symptoms of anxiety and depression were related to eating behaviours in this age group. Methods: Three hundred and forty three children (mean age 8.75 years) completed questionnaires designed to measure dietary restraint, emotional eating and external eating, as well as general and social anxiety, and symptoms of depression. Children also provided details about their friendship groups. Results: Pre-adolescents’ dietary restraint was positively predicted by the dietary restraint of members of their friendship groups, and their individual levels of anxiety and depression. The levels of general anxiety exhibited by pre-adolescents predicted emotional and external eating behaviours. Younger children were significantly more likely to report higher levels of emotional and external eating than older children, and boys were more likely to report more external eating behaviours than girls. Conclusions: These results suggest that greater dieting behaviours in pre-adolescents are related to their friends’ reports of greater dieting behaviours. In contrast, greater levels of eating governed by emotions, and eating in response to external hunger cues, are related to greater symptoms of anxiety in pre-adolescent children. Such findings underline the importance of friends’ social influences on dieting behaviours in this age group and highlight the value of targeting healthy eating and eating disorder prevention interventions at pre-adolescents.
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