RESUMO
Weight-problem perception is an individual's self-assessment that they are overweight or obese, and is associated with emotional eating beyond that which can be explained by self-reported weight status and depression. Extant research, however, has not examined weight-problem perception and emotional eating within Latinas in the United States. The purpose of this study was to investigate emotional eating, weight-problem perception, self-reported weight status (overweight, not overweight), depression, acculturation, and enculturation within Latinas. It was hypothesized that weight-problem perception, but not weight status, would contribute to higher levels of emotional eating after depression and an acculturation-enculturation interaction were covaried. Participants were 268 undergraduates from southeastern California who identified as female and as Latina. Participants completed questionnaires to measure the variables of interest. Results indicated that emotional eating in Latinas was correlated positively with body mass index and depression (p's ≤ .05) but not at all with acculturation nor enculturation (p's ≥ .05). Analyses of covariance revealed that neither weight-problem perception (p = .10) nor weight status (p = .05) had significant main effects on emotional eating whereas depression was a significant covariate (p ≤ .01). Limitations include correlational design and an exclusively undergraduate sample with little Latinx-subgroup variability. The inclusion of precise cultural or appearance-related variables in future research might explain why a relationship between weight-problem perception and emotional eating was not observed in this study. Implications include possible consideration of subjective distress about perceived weight, the role that treating depression might play to reduce emotional eating among Latinas, and the need to include ethnicity and culture in research about and interventions for weight-problem perception, emotional eating, and depression.
Assuntos
Depressão , Percepção de Peso , Índice de Massa Corporal , Peso Corporal , Feminino , Hispânico ou Latino , Humanos , Sobrepeso , Inquéritos e Questionários , Estados UnidosRESUMO
Aims: The antenatal period provides an important opportunity for giving advice on healthy lifestyle choices. However, the prevalence of maternal obesity is increasing, and women report that they do not receive counseling. We investigated the information given to pregnant women on gestational weight gain, physical activity, and nutrition during pregnancy in relation with their initial weight status, current gestational weight gain and diagnoses of either pre-pregnancy overweight/obesity or excessive gestational weight gain. Methods: Cross-sectional survey using a questionnaire. Pregnant participants (n = 141) were recruited from a midwife center. They completed a structured questionnaire on the information they received during their pregnancy and we assessed its relationship with their weight. Results: We found that many pregnant women did not receive advice about physical activity, gestational weight gain and nutrition (37.5, 53.2, and 66.2%, respectively). Women with weight problems (pre-pregnancy overweight/obesity and excessive gestational weight gain) were less targeted for counseling, although more than 80% of the women viewed receiving information on these topics as positive. Also, being informed of a weight problem was associated with a greater chance of receiving information about physical activity, gestational weight gain and nutrition (all p < 0.05). However, verbalization of the weight problems was low (14.0% of women with pre-pregnancy overweight were informed of their status). Conclusion: Health professionals should dispense more information, especially on PA and particularly for women with weight problems. Verbalization of the weight problem seems associated with more frequent transmission of information.