For
teen girls, risky dieting tied to family conflict, depression
Send a link to a friend
[June 16, 2016]
By Kathryn Doyle
Young teen girls are more likely to count
calories, skip meals and engage in other risky dieting behaviors if
they’re experiencing family conflict or have symptoms of depressed mood,
according to a new study from Australia.
|
“There are many factors associated with the development of risky
dieting, including socialization by peers, media, and
parents/family,” said coauthor Adrian B. Kelly of The University of
Queensland in an email. “This study takes a look at the emotional
climate of families as an underlying vulnerability of girls to risky
dieting.”
In Australia, around 39 percent of teen girls and 13 percent of teen
boys engage in intermediate or extreme dieting, Kelly said.
The researchers surveyed more than 4,000 girls aged 11 to 14 in 231
schools in three Australian states. Girls answered a questionnaire
about specific behaviors including calorie counting, reducing food
quantities at meals or skipping meals as a means of controlling
weight, rating how often they engaged in each behavior, from
“seldom/never” to “almost always.”
They also completed a mood and feelings questionnaire, described how
close they were to their fathers and mothers, and rated three items
about conflict at home, such as, “people in my family often insult
and yell at each other.”
Those with higher levels of family conflict were also more likely to
engage in dieting behavior, and feeling depressed seemed to explain
at least part of that connection, according to the results in the
journal Eating Behaviors.
The researchers accounted for the start of puberty and factored in
socioeconomic status based on parents’ occupations. Girls with lower
socioeconomic status and those who started puberty early, having
their first period at age 11 or younger, were more likely than
others to diet.
“There are many things that can be done - this study points to the
potential value of addressing stressful family events like conflict
and working on ways to reduce the negative impact on childrens’
emotional wellbeing,” Kelly told Reuters Health by email. “We see
this area to be something that might supplement other strategies,
rather than replace other evidence-based approaches.”
[to top of second column] |
But this study only considered one point in time. It cannot address
whether conflict or depression cause risky eating behavior; it only
indicates they are somehow connected, the authors write.
“This is one of few studies of a large community sample of girls
during their transition to puberty,” said professor John Toumbourou,
chair in health psychology at Deakin University in Geelong,
Australia, who was not involved in the research.
“The finding that the effect of family conflict on adolescent
dieting may be mediated by depressive symptoms adds weight to the
argument that tackling early depressive symptoms may be critical in
efforts to prevent unhealthy dieting in adolescent girls,”
Toumbourou told Reuters Health by email.
But the findings should be treated cautiously until they are
confirmed in long-term studies and researchers test interventions to
reduce depression, he said.
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/24QObee Eating Behaviors, online June 8, 2016.
[© 2016 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2016 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|