Tsuji Rikako, Nishi Daisuke, Sasaki Natsu, Akiyama Hiroto, Kuroda Reiko, Tsuno Kanami, Imamura Kotaro, Kawakami Norito
Department of Mental Health, Graduate School of Medicine The University of Tokyo Hongo, Bunkyo-ku Tokyo Japan.
Urawa Psychiatry Sanatorium Saitama Japan.
PCN Rep. 2022 Nov 27;1(4):e61. doi: 10.1002/pcn5.61. eCollection 2022 Dec.
Previous studies evaluated the association between eating alone and mental health mainly in older people and adolescents. This study aimed to evaluate the association between dinner frequency with others and psychological distress during the COVID-19 outbreak among the Japanese working population.
Data were acquired from a prospective online cohort study (the Employee Cohort Study in the COVID-19 pandemic in Japan) conducted in February 2021 as a cross-sectional design. Dinner frequency with others was categorized into five groups: "almost daily," "4-5 times per week," "2-3 times per week," "once per week," and "less than once per week," setting them as a predictor variable. Modified Poisson regression was performed to calculate the prevalence ratio of psychological distress with multiple imputation for missing data. Global fear and worry about COVID-19 were adjusted as a covariate.
A total of 1171 participants completed the questionnaire. Respondents who ate dinner with others "almost daily" had the least psychological distress than those who ate with others "4-5 times," "2-3 times," and "once per week" in the crude model (prevalence ratio (95% CI): 1 [reference], 1.34 [1.08-1.67], 1.40 [1.15-1.69], 1.44 [1.12-1.85], respectively). The association was comparable after adjusting for global fear and worry about COVID-19.
Among those who ate dinner with others at least once a week, those who ate with others "almost daily" had the least psychological distress. The association was comparable after adjusting for global fear and worry about COVID-19. Further study is needed on why those who eat with others less than once a week may have a lower prevalence ratio of having mental distress.
以往研究主要评估了老年人和青少年中独自用餐与心理健康之间的关联。本研究旨在评估在日本工作人群中,疫情期间与他人共进晚餐的频率与心理困扰之间的关联。
数据来自于2021年2月进行的一项前瞻性在线队列研究(日本新冠疫情期间员工队列研究),采用横断面设计。与他人共进晚餐的频率分为五组:“几乎每天”、“每周4 - 5次”、“每周2 - 3次”、“每周一次”和“每周少于一次”,将其作为预测变量。采用修正泊松回归计算心理困扰的患病率比,并对缺失数据进行多重插补。将对新冠疫情的总体恐惧和担忧作为协变量进行调整。
共有1171名参与者完成了问卷调查。在粗模型中,“几乎每天”与他人共进晚餐的受访者心理困扰程度低于“每周4 - 5次”、“每周2 - 3次”和“每周一次”与他人共进晚餐的受访者(患病率比(95%可信区间)分别为:1[参照]、1.34[1.08 - 1.67]、1.40[1.15 - 1.69]、1.44[1.12 - 1.85])。在调整了对新冠疫情的总体恐惧和担忧后,这种关联具有可比性。
在每周至少与他人共进一次晚餐的人群中,“几乎每天”与他人共进晚餐的人心理困扰程度最低。在调整了对新冠疫情的总体恐惧和担忧后,这种关联具有可比性。对于每周与他人共进晚餐少于一次的人心理困扰患病率较低的原因,还需要进一步研究。