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1.
Ann Behav Med ; 58(6): 412-421, 2024 May 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38581675

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: The present study aimed to examine associations between different types of relationship functioning and disordered eating behaviors (DEBs) in the everyday lives of sexual minority women in same-sex relationships-an at-risk population that has not been assessed in this context. METHODS: Participants included 321 young sexual minority women (Mage = 27.56, SD = 3.67) in same-sex relationships who completed surveys assessing their daily relationship functioning and DEB use each day for a 14-day daily diary period. Multilevel structural equation modeling was used to examine daily-, person-, and couple-level associations among women's daily relationship functioning (general relationship functioning, positive and negative relational behaviors they and, separately, their partners engaged in) and DEBs (overeating, loss of control eating, emotional eating, and dietary restriction). RESULTS: Results generally indicated that more positive and less negative daily relationship functioning across all assessed constructs was associated with less same-day emotional eating. In contrast, associations between all daily relationship functioning constructs and loss of control eating were not significant, nor were any relationship functioning-DEB associations at the couple level. More circumscribed patterns of association were identified for associations between the relationship functioning constructs, and overeating and dietary restriction. CONCLUSIONS: Collectively, these findings provide insight into how aspects of daily relationship functioning map onto sexual minority women's daily engagement in DEBs that are linked to poor health long-term, and directions for future research and clinical practice that may warrant consideration moving forward to help advance the evidence-base and care for this historically overlooked and underserved population.


The present study examined associations between different types of relationship functioning (e.g., general relationship functioning, positive and negative relational behaviors that participants and their partners engaged in during their interactions with one another) and disordered eating behaviors (DEBs) in the everyday lives of sexual minority women in same-sex relationships. Results generally indicated that on days when women reported more positive and less negative daily relationship functioning, they also reported less emotional eating that day. In contrast, associations between different types of daily relationship functioning and loss of control eating were not significant. Furthermore, associations between different types of daily relationship functioning relative to overeating and dietary restriction varied based on the type of relationship functioning and DEB under consideration. Collectively, these findings provide insight into how different types of daily relationship functioning map onto sexual minority women's daily engagement in DEBs that are linked to poor health long-term. These findings also provide directions for future research and clinical practice that may warrant consideration moving forward to help advance the evidence base and care for this historically overlooked and underserved population.


Subject(s)
Feeding and Eating Disorders , Homosexuality, Female , Interpersonal Relations , Sexual and Gender Minorities , Humans , Female , Feeding and Eating Disorders/psychology , Adult , Sexual and Gender Minorities/psychology , Homosexuality, Female/psychology , Young Adult , Feeding Behavior/psychology , Sexual Partners/psychology
2.
J Sport Exerc Psychol ; 45(6): 316-324, 2023 Dec 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37922894

ABSTRACT

The goal of the present study was to examine naturalistic associations between body satisfaction and physical activity (PA) among women in midlife. Women 40-60 years of age with cardiovascular risk factors (e.g., hypertension; N = 75; Mage = 51.63) responded to five surveys per day for 10 days while accelerometer-derived PA measurements were collected continuously. PA parameters included cognitive determinants (PA motivation and intentions) and accelerometer-measured PA behavior (sedentary behavior, light-intensity PA, and moderate to vigorous PA). Multilevel models indicated that associations between body satisfaction and everyday PA differed across PA determinants, time frames (concurrent and prospective), and levels (momentary, daily, and person). For example, positive bidirectional associations were identified between women's daily body satisfaction and PA motivation, whereas greater momentary light-intensity PA (but not moderate to vigorous PA) was unidirectionally associated with greater body satisfaction at a subsequent prompt. These findings provide insight into how associations between body satisfaction and PA unfold in the daily lives of women in midlife and highlight the complexities of these associations.


Subject(s)
Cardiovascular Diseases , Humans , Female , Prospective Studies , Ecological Momentary Assessment , Risk Factors , Exercise/psychology , Heart Disease Risk Factors , Personal Satisfaction , Accelerometry
3.
Behav Ther ; 54(3): 539-556, 2023 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37088509

ABSTRACT

Coinciding with widespread efforts to address obesity, weight bias internalization (a process of self-devaluation wherein individuals apply weight-biased stereotypes to themselves) has gained increased attention as a robust correlate of poor health outcomes. The present meta-analysis aimed to provide the largest quantitative synthesis of associations between weight bias internalization and health-related correlates. Studies that provided zero-order correlations for cross-sectional or prospective associations between weight bias internalization and physical, psychosocial, and behavioral health correlates were included in the meta-analysis. Meta-regression determined whether these associations differed based on demographic (sex/gender, race, age), anthropometric (body mass index), and study-level (publication status, sample type, study quality) moderators. Data for 149 (sub)samples were identified that included between 14 and 18,766 participants (M sample size = 534.96, SD = 1,914.43; M age = 34.73, SD = 12.61, range = 9.95-65.70). Results indicated that greater weight bias internalization was concurrently associated with worse psychosocial (e.g., negative and positive mental health, social functioning), physical (e.g., BMI, weight maintenance, health-related quality of life [HRQoL]), and behavioral health (e.g., disordered eating behaviors, healthy eating, physical activity) across most constructs, with effects ranging from small to very large in magnitude. Preliminary evidence also suggested that greater weight bias internalization was subsequently associated with less weight loss and increased negative mental health. Notable variations in the nature and magnitude of these associations were identified based on the health-related correlate and moderator under consideration. These findings indicate that weight bias internalization is linked to multiple adverse health-related outcomes and provide insight into priorities for future research, theory building, and interventions in this area.


Subject(s)
Quality of Life , Weight Prejudice , Adult , Humans , Body Mass Index , Body Weight , Cross-Sectional Studies , Obesity/psychology , Child , Adolescent , Young Adult , Middle Aged , Aged
4.
Int J Eat Disord ; 56(1): 203-215, 2023 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36479981

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: Early COVID-19 eating disorders (EDs) research used regionally restricted samples with little sociodemographic diversity. The present study aimed to address these research gaps by examining whether pandemic-related changes in ED symptoms and mental healthcare prevalence differed for historically marginalized groups within a national sample of US college students. METHOD: Participants included 242,906 US college students (Mage  = 23.45, SD = 7.04; MBMI  = 25.28, SD = 5.91) who completed the repeated cross-sectional multi-institute Healthy Minds Study between January 2019 and May 2021. Moderated logistic regressions examined whether pandemic-related changes in individuals' likelihoods of exhibiting current probable ED, reporting lifetime ED diagnoses, and-among individuals with current probable ED-mental healthcare engagement differed for diverse gender, sexual, and racial/ethnic identity groups, and by body mass index (BMI) and financial stress. RESULTS: There were increases of 5% and 12% in individuals' likelihoods of exhibiting current probable ED and symptomatic individuals' mental healthcare engagement, respectively, pre- to post-COVID-19 onset, but no pandemic-related changes in lifetime ED diagnosis prevalence. There were also important variations in these time-trends for different marginalized groups. For example, individuals identifying as genderqueer/gender nonconforming and lesbian exhibited increasing ED symptoms pre- to post-COVID-19 onset, and individuals with current probable ED and higher BMIs were increasingly likely to receive mental healthcare. Associations between financial stress, and the ED and mental healthcare outcomes did not change over time. DISCUSSION: These findings provide insight into groups of US college students that experienced disproportionate ED burden during the pandemic at the population level, and directions for research and interventions that warrant consideration.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Feeding and Eating Disorders , Mental Health Services , Female , Humans , Young Adult , Adult , COVID-19/epidemiology , Pandemics , Cross-Sectional Studies , Feeding and Eating Disorders/diagnosis , Feeding and Eating Disorders/epidemiology , Feeding and Eating Disorders/therapy , Students
5.
Int J Eat Disord ; 56(2): 464-469, 2023 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36571239

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: No prior research has examined whether the types of emotion words individuals use to describe their affective experiences cluster along affective dimensions inherent within leading affect theories, or how such emotion word use maps onto eating disorder (ED) symptoms. METHOD: To address these gaps, latent profile analysis was used to empirically-identify groups of young adults (N = 352) by how often they use emotion words characterized by the circumplex model of affect's valence-arousal dimensions and basic emotions theory's basic versus complex emotion word categorizations. Auxiliary analyses examined differences in groups' ED symptoms (binge eating, purging, restricting, excessive exercising, muscle building, body dissatisfaction, and cognitive restraint). RESULTS: The 5-profile valence-arousal model and 4-profile basic-complex model were the best-fitting theoretically-supported solutions. Valence-arousal profiles with greater negative affect valence generally exhibited worse ED pathology than others, whereas profiles with greater positive affect valence produced inconsistent risk- and protective-factor relations with distinct ED symptoms. Basic-complex profiles characterized by frequent use of both basic and complex emotion words generally had the greatest ED severity, and profiles with greater basic emotion word use exhibited elevated binge eating. DISCUSSION: Individual-differences in young adults' emotion word use patterns, versus sample-level averages only, warrant further consideration in ED prevention and research. PUBLIC SIGNIFICANCE: The present findings suggest that young adults differ in the types of words they use to describe their emotional experiences, and that these unique emotion word use patterns are linked to distinct eating disorder symptoms. These sources of variation warrant further consideration in eating disorders prevention efforts and future research seeking to advance affect-based eating disorders theories.


Subject(s)
Binge-Eating Disorder , Bulimia , Feeding and Eating Disorders , Young Adult , Humans , Emotions/physiology , Binge-Eating Disorder/psychology
6.
Int J Eat Disord ; 56(3): 538-550, 2023 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36408855

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: The present study aimed to extend naturalistic weight stigma research by examining the following aims among young adults with body dissatisfaction and varied body mass indices (BMIs): (1) characterize the frequency of individuals' daily weight stigma experiences, and contextual variations, over a 14-day period; (2) examine whether BMI moderated daily associations between weight stigma experiences relative to eating disorder symptoms and intuitive eating behaviors. METHOD: Women (n = 174) and men (n = 24) completed a 14-day daily diary protocol. Concurrent and time-lagged multilevel models examined associations between daily weight stigma, and eating disorder and intuitive eating behaviors among women only due to the small subsample of men. RESULTS: Over the 14-day assessment, 43.94% (n = 87) of participants experienced weight stigma. Weight stigma rates varied based on how, where, and by whom weight stigma was expressed, and via BMI. Further, among women, multiple concurrent within-person associations were identified between women's daily weight stigma experiences and daily eating disorder symptoms (skipping meals, binge eating, and body dissatisfaction). Time-lagged associations also showed that women's weight stigma experiences on a given day were associated with a greater likelihood that they would limit the amount of food they consumed the next day. These associations did not differ via women's BMIs. DISCUSSION: Collectively, these findings provide important information on how weight stigma experiences unfold in daily life among individuals with body dissatisfaction and varied BMIs, and the proximal and more enduring impact of women's daily weight stigma experiences on their use of multiple adverse eating behaviors that can promote poor health. PUBLIC SIGNIFICANCE: The present findings provide important information on how, where, and by whom weight stigma experiences unfold in daily life among young adults with body dissatisfaction and varied body weights, as well as the proximal and more enduring impact of women's daily weight stigma experiences on their use of a variety of adverse eating behaviors that can promote poor health.


Subject(s)
Body Dissatisfaction , Feeding and Eating Disorders , Weight Prejudice , Male , Humans , Female , Young Adult , Body Weight , Feeding Behavior , Body Mass Index , Body Image
7.
Front Psychol ; 13: 855749, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36211932

ABSTRACT

Women in midlife experience health risks that could be mitigated by regular physical activity and reduced sedentary time, but this population rarely achieves physical activity levels that would protect their health. As a result, many behavioral interventions are designed to promote physical activity in this population, which are purportedly guided by theoretical models of health behavior (change) and activate an associated set of behavior change techniques (BCTs). The efficacy and effectiveness of these interventions appear to be limited, however, raising questions about their design and adaptation for women in midlife. Several aspects of these interventions are currently unclear. Specifically, which women they target (i.e., how "midlife" and "sedentary" or "inactive" are defined), which theoretical models or behavior BCTs are used, and how BCTs are activated in such interventions. A synthesis of this information would be useful as an initial step toward improving physical activity interventions for this at-risk group, and thus, represented the goal of the present scoping review. Eligibility required publication in a peer-reviewed journal in English between 2000 and 2021, inclusion of only women in midlife who did not have any medical or other restrictions on their physical activity (e.g., cancer diagnosis), and free-living physical activity or sedentary behavior as the target outcome (with associated assessment). Of the 4,410 initial results, 51 articles met inclusion criteria, and these described 36 unique interventions. More than half of the articles (59%) named an underlying theoretical model and interventions included an average of 3.76 identifiable BCTs (range 1-11). However, descriptions of many interventions were limited and did not provide enough detail to determine whether or how specific BCTs were activated. Interventions also used a wide range of inclusion criteria for age range and starting activity level, which has implications for targeting/tailoring and effectiveness, and many interventions focused on marginalized populations (e.g., women from racial/ethnic minority backgrounds, those un- or under-insured). The present review identifies some strengths and highlights important limitations of existing literature, as well as key opportunities for advancing the design and potential utility of physical activity interventions for women in midlife. Systematic review registration: https://osf.io/g8tuc.

8.
Int J Eat Disord ; 55(6): 776-789, 2022 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35338504

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: The present study aimed to: (1) identify recent temporal changes in the prevalence of different cognitive and behavioral eating disorder (ED) symptoms, current probable EDs, lifetime ED diagnoses, and mental healthcare use among college students across the United States; (2) determine whether established disparities in ED prevalence and receiving mental healthcare have widened or narrowed over time for marginalized groups within this population. METHOD: Participants included a large national sample of U.S. college students (N = 286,720) who completed the repeated cross-sectional Healthy Minds Study from 2013 to 2020. Descriptive statistics and polynomial regressions quantified time-trends in participants' ED symptoms and past 12-month mental healthcare. Moderated regressions examined temporal changes in ED symptoms and mental healthcare based on sociodemographic characteristics. RESULTS: Individuals' engagement in different cognitive and behavioral ED symptoms, and likelihoods of exhibiting current probable EDs, reporting lifetime ED diagnoses, and (for individuals with current probable EDs) receiving therapy or counseling in the past 12-months exhibited nonlinear increases from 2013 to 2020. Further, the prevalence of current and lifetime ED symptoms and (for symptomatic individuals) past 12-month mental healthcare differed over time for individuals with different BMIs and gender, sexual, and racial/ethnic identities (but not ages). In particular, individuals with higher BMIs and those who identified as male, bisexual, and gay, lesbian, or queer exhibited increasing ED pathology over time. DISCUSSION: These findings provide important information on groups of U.S. college students that have experienced increasing burden of ED symptoms and may help guide ED prevention, treatment, and research priorities. PUBLIC SIGNIFICANCE: Recent temporal changes in the prevalence of eating disorder (ED) symptoms and mental healthcare were examined in a national sample of U.S. young adults. Non-linear increases in ED symptoms and mental healthcare were identified among U.S. young adults overall from 2013 to 2020. U.S. young adults with higher BMIs, males, bisexual, and gay, lesbian, or queer individuals exhibited increasing ED burden over time.


Subject(s)
Feeding and Eating Disorders , Sexual and Gender Minorities , Cross-Sectional Studies , Feeding and Eating Disorders/diagnosis , Feeding and Eating Disorders/epidemiology , Female , Humans , Male , Prevalence , Students/psychology , United States/epidemiology , Young Adult
9.
Appetite ; 174: 106004, 2022 07 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35321817

ABSTRACT

Prior research has shown that larger differences between individuals' actual and perceived bodily states are associated with their engagement in weight change behaviors. However, it remains unknown whether these intrapersonal associations extend to the parent-adolescent dyadic level. To address this research gap, the present study examined associations between parents' and adolescents' weight misperceptions (discrepancies between individuals' self-reported body mass indices and perceived weight statuses) relative to participants' own and their dyadic partners' weight change behaviors and dietary intakes. Participants included a large community sample of parent-adolescent dyads (N = 1,606 dyads) who completed the National Cancer Institute's FLASHE Study. Actor-partner interdependence models examined dyadic associations among participants' weight misperceptions (over- and under-perceptions) relative to their own and their dyadic partners' general weight change behaviors (current weight loss and gain behaviors), and low nutrient (e.g., processed foods) and nutrient-dense (e.g., fruits/vegetables) dietary intakes. Multiple intrapersonal and cross-dyad member associations were identified that varied based on the direction of weight misperceptions, the weight control behavior type, and whether the dyadic member was a parent or adolescent. For example, adolescents' weight under-perception was associated with a lower likelihood of their own, but not their parents', current weight loss behavior use, whereas parents who exhibited weight under-perception were less likely to report weight loss behaviors at the intrapersonal level and were less likely to have adolescents who reported weight loss behaviors. These results suggest that associations among weight misperceptions and weight control behaviors within the parent-adolescent dyadic context are complex, and that both inter- and intra-individual processes are implicated in these associations. The impact of these perceptual influences on parent-adolescent dyads' use of both healthy and disordered eating behaviors warrants further exploration in future research.


Subject(s)
Parent-Child Relations , Parents , Adolescent , Eating , Humans , Vegetables , Weight Loss
10.
Clin Psychol Rev ; 92: 102127, 2022 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35074712

ABSTRACT

Weight bias internalization (WBI), a process of weight-based self-devaluation, has been associated with adverse mental and physical health. However, there are limitations with the existing conceptualization and operationalization of WBI that raise questions about the implications of this evidence-base. To address these limitations, the present study investigated the construct validity of WBI by conducting a meta-analysis of associations between WBI (as currently operationalized) and conceptually-related correlates. Studies identified through October 2021 that provided zero-order correlations for associations between WBI and conceptually-related constructs were examined. Meta-regression determined whether these associations differed across WBI measures and demographic (age, sex/gender, race, BMI) and study-level (publication status, sample type, study quality) moderators. Data for 128 (sub)samples were identified (Msample size = 477.83, SD = 1679.90; Mage = 34.46, SD = 12.17; range = 10.21-56.60). Greater WBI exhibited large to very large associations with factors suggested to have considerable overlap with this construct (negative and positive body image, self-devaluation), general and weight-specific experiential avoidance, and individuals' anticipation of future weight stigma. Associations varied for other constructs that have been differentially included in conceptualizations of WBI (endorsing weight bias, weight stigma stereotype awareness, weight stigma experiences), and via measurement-related, demographic, and study-level factors. These findings provide important information that can advance WBI conceptualization and measure-refinement.


Subject(s)
Weight Prejudice , Body Weight , Humans , Obesity , Self Concept , Social Stigma
11.
Eat Weight Disord ; 27(4): 1491-1504, 2022 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34468974

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: The present study aimed to extend existing research by examining adolescent-parent dyadic associations among adaptive and maladaptive family meal characteristics, positive and negative emotion suppression, and emotional eating. METHOD: Participants included a community-based sample of adolescents and parents (N = 1646 dyads) who participated in the National Cancer Institute's Family Life, Activity, Sun, Health, and Eating Study. Dyad members both completed measures assessing family meal characteristics (family meal importance beliefs, family mealtime television watching), emotion suppression, and emotional eating via online surveys. Actor-partner interdependence models were used to examine dyadic associations among the assessed family meal characteristics, positive and negative emotion suppression, and emotional eating. RESULTS: Multiple within-person (e.g., adolescent-adolescent, parent-parent), cross-dyad member (e.g., adolescent-parent, parent-adolescent), and divergent adolescent versus parent dyadic effects were identified that differed based on the extent to which participants suppressed positive versus negative affect. For example, whereas adolescents' stronger beliefs in the importance of frequent family meals were associated with lower levels of their own suppression of positive emotions and, in turn, lower levels of both their own and their parents' emotional eating, these mediational associations were only identified at the within-person (not cross-dyad member) level among parents. CONCLUSIONS: Collectively, these findings attest to the complexity of associations among the assessed risk and protective family meal characteristics, the suppression of differentially valenced emotions, and emotional eating that manifest at the adolescent-parent dyadic level. Findings also support the continued use of a family-based perspective to further the understanding of factors that are associated with emotional eating. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: Level V, cross-sectional descriptive study.


Subject(s)
Parent-Child Relations , Parents , Adolescent , Cross-Sectional Studies , Emotions , Humans , Meals , Parents/psychology
12.
Am J Health Promot ; 36(1): 117-128, 2022 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34350774

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: The present study examined race and gender differences among positive psychological constructs, and adaptive eating and exercise behaviors. DESIGN: Cross-sectional. SETTING: Online. SAMPLE: College students (N = 1,228; Mage = 22.27, SD = 5.83). MEASURES: Participants completed measures assessing positive body image, eudaimonic psychological well-being, and health behaviors. ANALYSES: Multi-group structural equation modeling was used to examine whether White versus Black race and, separately, woman versus man gender identity moderated associations among body appreciation, eudaimonic psychological well-being, and intuitive eating and intuitive exercising. RESULTS: Results generally indicated that greater body appreciation was associated with greater eudaimonic psychological well-being (ßs = 0.48, 0.56) and, in turn, intuitive eating (ßs = -0.20, 0.25) and intuitive exercising (ßs = -0.06, 0.23). However, notable variations in this pattern of results were identified based on the facet of intuitive eating and exercising under investigation, and participants' racial identities. For example, greater eudaimonic psychological well-being strictly mediated a positive association between body appreciation and reliance on hunger and satiety cues intuitive eating behaviors among participants who identified as Black (95%CI: 0.01, 0.12), but not White (95%CI: -0.08, 0.04). CONCLUSIONS: Although the present findings warrant replication using longitudinal designs due to the cross-sectional nature of the present study, these findings suggest that increasing adults' eudaimonic psychological well-being may help improve health-promoting eating and exercise behaviors, and should be assessed as a mechanism of change in future clinical research.


Subject(s)
Body Image , Gender Identity , Adult , Body Image/psychology , Cross-Sectional Studies , Eating/psychology , Feeding Behavior/psychology , Female , Humans , Male , Sex Factors
13.
J Fam Psychol ; 36(5): 780-790, 2022 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34968096

ABSTRACT

Nearly all past research about body dissatisfaction and romantic relationship factors is among heterosexual couples; little is known about these associations in sexual minority couples. The present study aimed to fill gaps in the current literature by using actor-partner interdependence models (APIMs) to examine dyadic patterns of association between body dissatisfaction and different aspects of relationship functioning among same-sex female couples. Participants were 163 same-sex female romantic dyads (326 women) between the ages of 18-35 years who completed measures of body dissatisfaction and relationship factors. Results from significance testing of actor and partner effects indicated higher levels of women's own body dissatisfaction were associated with lower levels of their own, but not their partner's, relationship satisfaction, closeness, sexual satisfaction, and intimacy/connectedness. Significance testing alone indicated that the association between one's own body dissatisfaction and their partner's relationship satisfaction was not significant. However, dyadic pattern testing identified a partner pattern for this effect, which suggests that the association between one's own body dissatisfaction and one's own relationship satisfaction is similar in magnitude and direction as that between an individuals' own body dissatisfaction and their partner's relationship satisfaction. In this study, women's own body dissatisfaction was found to be negatively associated with their own relationship functioning, which is consistent with findings of women in male-female couples. Thus, these findings highlight the important role that body dissatisfaction plays in women's relationship experiences. More research is needed to better understand potential cross-partner effects of body dissatisfaction and relationship factors in same-sex female couples. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).


Subject(s)
Body Dissatisfaction , Interpersonal Relations , Adolescent , Adult , Female , Humans , Male , Personal Satisfaction , Sexual Behavior/psychology , Sexual Partners/psychology , Young Adult
14.
Psychol Assess ; 33(11): 1025-1037, 2021 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34672641

ABSTRACT

Sexual minority women experience greater health disparities relative to heterosexual women, which is thought to be due to unique stressors related to their sexual identities. Daily diary or momentary assessments may provide a more nuanced approach to understanding how sexual minority stressors relate to health behaviors than cross-sectional studies provide. To date, there is no validated measure to examine daily sexual minority stressors. A recent pilot study developed a brief (8-item) measure for assessing sexual minority stressors in self-identified lesbian or mostly lesbian women (Heron et al., 2018). Although an optimal number of items were generated to best capture the daily experiences of lesbian women, psychometric examination and validation of this new measure is necessary. Using multilevel confirmatory factor analysis among a fully scaled sample of sexual minority women, the present study established that the Daily Sexual Minority Stressors Scale has good model fit as a unidimensional measure (i.e., one factor at each level of analysis). Intraclass correlations indicate the majority of variation (57%) is within person. Additionally, we established convergent and discriminant validity using similar measures (single-item assessment, general stressors, negative affect, history of discrimination, and heterosexism). Finally, criterion validity was supported. At the daily level, experiencing daily sexual minority stressors was associated with a significantly greater likelihood of drinking alcohol that day. Experiencing more daily sexual minority stressors during the study period was significantly associated with a history of harassment and discrimination, victimization, isolation, vigilance, and also with acceptance concerns, difficult processes, and internalized homonegativity. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved).


Subject(s)
Homosexuality, Female , Spouses , Stress, Psychological , Surveys and Questionnaires , Female , Homosexuality, Female/psychology , Homosexuality, Female/statistics & numerical data , Humans , Psychometrics , Reproducibility of Results , Spouses/psychology , Spouses/statistics & numerical data , Stress, Psychological/diagnosis , Young Adult
15.
Women Health ; 61(8): 791-799, 2021 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34433381

ABSTRACT

The present study aimed to clarify existing research that has inconsistently shown that weight suppression (differences between individuals' highest and current body weights) is associated with worse eating disorder (ED) behaviors and negative body image among women with lifetime EDs, by examining whether an understudied client-supported protective factor for ED pathology - self-acceptance - moderates these associations. Currently symptomatic women with lifetime EDs (N = 108) completed measures assessing self-acceptance and ED symptoms via an online survey. Moderated regressions examined whether self-acceptance moderated associations between weight suppression and both body image (weight/shape preoccupation, overvaluation, dissatisfaction) and ED behavior (dietary restraint, compensatory behaviors, binge eating) outcomes. Results indicated that weight suppression was associated with more severe negative body image and dietary restraint, but not compensatory behaviors or binge eating. In contrast, self-acceptance consistently emerged as a protective factor relative to all negative body image and ED behavior indices. This protective effect did not offset apparent risk factor associations between weight suppression, and negative body image and ED behavior outcomes. These results support further assessment of self-acceptance as an understudied protective factor for women's ED symptoms and as a mechanism of change in EDs intervention research. Women's weight suppression should be assessed during ED prevention initiatives.


Subject(s)
Binge-Eating Disorder , Body Dissatisfaction , Feeding and Eating Disorders , Body Image , Body Weight , Feeding Behavior , Feeding and Eating Disorders/diagnosis , Female , Humans
16.
Appetite ; 167: 105603, 2021 12 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34280470

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: The present study aimed to improve the understanding of inter- and intrapersonal processes implicated in emotional eating using a large community sample of parent-adolescent dyads. METHOD: Participants included 1823 parent and adolescent dyads who completed the National Cancer Institute's Family Life, Activity, Sun, Health, and Eating Study. Parents and adolescents each completed measures assessing parents' feeding behaviors, and participants' own emotional functioning and eating behaviors. Actor-partner interdependence models examined dyadic associations among participants' reports of parents' regulatory feeding behaviors (allowing adolescents to eat for emotional comfort purposes, controlling adolescents' "junk" food/sugary drink intakes), emotion suppression, and emotional eating in the absence of hunger. RESULTS: Multiple within-person, cross-dyad member, and divergent parent versus adolescent dyadic effects were identified that differed based on the parental feeding behavior that parents and adolescents reported on. For example, adolescents' reports that their parents regulate their "junk" food/sugary drink intakes were associated with lower levels of their own emotion suppression and, in turn, lower levels of both their own and their parents' emotional eating, whereas parents' reports that they regulate their adolescents' "junk" food/sugary drink intakes were associated with higher levels of their own emotion suppression and emotional eating. CONCLUSIONS: These findings underscore the complex interconnectivity among parental feeding behaviors, emotion dysregulation, and emotional eating within the parent-adolescent dyadic context, and support the use of preventive disordered eating interventions focused on enhancing healthy parent feeding behaviors and adaptive emotion regulation skills from a family-based perspective.


Subject(s)
Hunger , Parent-Child Relations , Adolescent , Emotions , Feeding Behavior , Humans , Parents
17.
Exp Clin Psychopharmacol ; 29(5): 501-510, 2021 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34096757

ABSTRACT

Sexual minority women (i.e., women who identify as lesbian, bisexual, or other non-heterosexual orientations) report more hazardous drinking compared to heterosexual women. Sexual minority stress (SMS), or experiences related to sexual orientation-based discrimination and marginalization, have been implicated as contributing to these disparities. The association between sexual minority stress and alcohol use has been supported in cross-sectional, and to a limited extent, longitudinal studies. Few studies, however, have examined associations between SMS and alcohol use in sexual minority women's daily lives. Young sexual minority women (age 18-35; N = 321) were recruited to participate in a 14-day daily diary study in which they reported each morning on their SMS and alcohol use (drinking or not; drinking quantity; alcohol consequences) from the previous day. SMS was operationalized in four ways (global negative SMS experiences, specific SMS events, concealment of identity, discrimination). Results from concurrent multilevel models revealed that on days when sexual minority women experienced more global negative SMS, any specific SMS event, or discrimination, they were more likely to drink. Further, prospective models indicated that participants drank more and were more likely to report binge drinking on the day after they experienced at least one SMS event. These findings extend prior research by demonstrating that the association between SMS and alcohol use extends to the daily level of analysis among sexual minority women. Understanding the connection between SMS and alcohol use among sexual minority women is imperative to developing culturally tailored interventions to improve the health and well-being of this at-risk group. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved).


Subject(s)
Sexual and Gender Minorities , Adolescent , Adult , Bisexuality , Cross-Sectional Studies , Female , Heterosexuality , Humans , Male , Minority Groups , Young Adult
18.
Body Image ; 37: 38-49, 2021 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33556915

ABSTRACT

The present study aimed to expand weight stigma theoretical models by accounting for central tenets of prominent eating disorder (ED) theories and increasing the generalizability of existing models for individuals across the weight spectrum. College students (Sample 1: N = 1228; Sample 2: N = 1368) completed online surveys assessing stigma and ED symptoms. In each sample, separately, multi-group path analyses tested whether body mass index (BMI) classification (underweight/average weight, overweight, obese) moderated a model wherein weight stigma experiences were sequentially associated with weight bias internalization, body dissatisfaction, and five ED symptoms: binge eating, purging, restricting, excessive exercise, muscle building behaviors. Results supported the assessed model overall and for individuals in each BMI class, separately. Although patterns of associations differed for individuals with different BMIs, these variations were limited. The present findings suggest that the adverse impact of weight stigma on distinct ED symptoms is not limited to individuals with elevated BMIs and that these associations are generally explained by the same mechanisms. Weight stigma interventions that focus on decreasing weight bias internalization and body dissatisfaction are recommended for individuals across the weight spectrum. Further examination of associations between weight stigma and multiple ED symptoms, beyond disinhibited eating, is supported.


Subject(s)
Body Dissatisfaction/psychology , Body Image/psychology , Feeding and Eating Disorders/psychology , Weight Prejudice/psychology , Adolescent , Adult , Body Mass Index , Female , Humans , Male , Mid-Atlantic Region , Students/psychology , Students/statistics & numerical data , Surveys and Questionnaires , Universities , Young Adult
19.
Behav Med ; 47(4): 272-284, 2021.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32275196

ABSTRACT

The present study aimed to determine how young adults' use of disordered eating behaviors (DEBs) and alcohol uniquely cluster with one another, how these clusters differ by sex and race, and map onto health-related correlates. As a part of a cross-sectional study assessing college student health and experiences, female (n = 1,026), male (n = 336), White (n = 640), and Black (n = 561) young adult college students at three universities (Mage = 20.54, SD = 1.80) completed measures assessing DEBs and alcohol use, and physical and mental health. Multigroup mixture modeling was used to identify subgroups of female, male, White, and Black young adults that are characterized by different levels of DEBs (fasting, food avoidance, loss of control eating, overeating) and alcohol use (binge drinking, drinking quantity). Whether group membership relates to theoretically and clinically relevant health correlates (stress, depressive symptoms, sleep health) was examined via auxiliary analyses. Qualitative and quantitative differences were identified in the best-fitting mixture models for female (four groups), male (four groups), White (five groups), and Black (three groups) participants that suggest sex and racial variations exist in patterns of DEBs and alcohol use severity. Generally, classification in groups characterized by moderate to high probabilities of DEBs only, or the combination of moderate to high DEBs and alcohol use, was associated with worse affective concerns across sexes and races. Targeting young adults' DEBs and alcohol use via diversity-informed treatments focused on coping skill development may help promote health and well-being.


Subject(s)
Feeding and Eating Disorders , Health Promotion , Adult , Alcohol Drinking , Cross-Sectional Studies , Female , Humans , Male , Race Factors , Students , Universities , Young Adult
20.
Eat Weight Disord ; 26(1): 159-168, 2021 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31853888

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: Determine whether gender differences exist in associations among central barriers to and facilitators of eating disorder (ED) help-seeking-ED stigma, negative affect, perceived ED treatment need-as a function of individuals' probability of classification within empirically derived groups characterized by different dietary restraint patterns. METHOD: As part of the cross-sectional, multi-institute Healthy Bodies Study, women (n = 2215) and men (n = 986) attending three colleges and universities in 2015 completed measures of ED symptoms, affect, and ED help-seeking in an online survey. Structural equation mixture modeling was used to (1) classify women and men, separately, into distinct classes characterized by unique dietary restraint patterns and (2) test associations among the three ED help-seeking barriers and facilitators within each class. RESULTS: Five dietary restraint symptoms (food amount limiting attempts, fasting, food avoidance, following food/diet rules, desiring an empty stomach) clustered within four classes among women and three classes among men, which were characterized by qualitative and quantitative similarities and differences. Further, opposite patterns were generally found in associations among the ED help-seeking barriers and facilitators for women versus men as a function of the way dietary restraint symptoms clustered within each class. For example, bivariate associations between worse ED stigma and negative affect relative to greater perceived ED treatment need were both significant only among women in their lowest restraint severity class, whereas these associations were both significant among men in their highest severity class. DISCUSSION: These findings can help to increase the reach of ED intervention efforts, including increasing ED help-seeking rates. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: Level V, cross-sectional descriptive study.


Subject(s)
Feeding and Eating Disorders , Cross-Sectional Studies , Diet , Female , Humans , Male , Social Stigma , Surveys and Questionnaires
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