Social and Behavioral Sciences Branch, Division of Intramural Population Health Research, Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, 6710B Rockledge Drive, MSC 7004, Bethesda, MD 20817, USA.
Social and Behavioral Sciences Branch, Division of Intramural Population Health Research, Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, 6710B Rockledge Drive, MSC 7004, Bethesda, MD 20817, USA; Colorado College, WB#1195, 902 N Cascade Ave, Colorado Springs, CO 80946, USA.
Eat Behav. 2019 Apr;33:85-90. doi: 10.1016/j.eatbeh.2019.04.003. Epub 2019 Apr 18.
Sexual minority adolescents are more likely than heterosexual peers to engage in maladaptive eating behaviors such as restrictive dieting. However, prior studies relied on cross-sectional data and did not test potential mechanisms. This study examined longitudinal associations between adolescent sexual minority status and three maladaptive eating behaviors (restrictive dieting, diet pill use, and drug-related dieting) in young adulthood and tested higher perceived weight status as a mediator of observed disparities. Data were drawn from Waves 2 (11th grade in 2010/2011) to 7 (4 years post high school in 2015/2016) of the NEXT Generation Health Study, a U.S. national longitudinal cohort of adolescents (n = 1925). Logistic regression analyses revealed that, relative to heterosexual females, sexual minority females were more likely to report any restrictive dieting (extreme food intake restriction) in the past year (62.9% vs. 37.0%; Adjusted Odds Ratio = 2.26, 95% CI = 1.07, 4.76). Associations between sexual minority status and diet pills use or drug-related dieting were not found. Results from structural equation modeling indicated that higher perceived weight status was a significant mediator of the association between sexual minority status and restrictive dieting among females. These findings highlight higher perceived weight status as an important cognitive mechanism explaining why sexual minority females are at heightened risk for restrictive dieting in young adulthood. To optimally inform prevention efforts, additional research is needed to test the extent to which minority stressors may shape weight perceptions and their contribution to maladaptive and disordered eating behaviors among sexual minority adolescents.
性少数青少年比异性恋同龄人更有可能采取不良的饮食行为,如限制饮食。然而,先前的研究依赖于横断面数据,并未测试潜在的机制。本研究检验了青少年性少数群体身份与三种不良饮食行为(限制饮食、服用减肥药和与药物相关的节食)在青年期的纵向关联,并测试了更高的感知体重状况作为观察到的差异的中介。数据来自下一代健康研究的第 2 波(2010/2011 年 11 年级)至第 7 波(2015/2016 年高中毕业后 4 年),这是一项美国全国性青少年纵向队列研究(n=1925)。逻辑回归分析显示,与异性恋女性相比,性少数女性在过去一年中更有可能报告任何限制饮食(极端食物摄入限制)(62.9%比 37.0%;调整后的优势比=2.26,95%可信区间=1.07,4.76)。性少数群体身份与减肥药使用或与药物相关的节食之间没有关联。结构方程模型的结果表明,更高的感知体重状况是性少数群体身份与女性限制饮食之间关联的一个重要中介。这些发现强调了更高的感知体重状况作为一个重要的认知机制,解释了为什么性少数女性在青年期更有可能出现限制饮食。为了最佳地为预防工作提供信息,需要进行更多的研究,以测试少数群体压力因素可能如何影响体重感知及其对性少数青少年不良和紊乱饮食行为的贡献。