Department of Psychology, University of North Florida, 1 UNF Drive, Jacksonville, FL 32224, United States.
Department of Psychology, University of North Florida, 1 UNF Drive, Jacksonville, FL 32224, United States.
Appetite. 2024 Oct 1;201:107608. doi: 10.1016/j.appet.2024.107608. Epub 2024 Jul 17.
Emotional overeating is defined as eating in response to emotions. Around the preschool years, there is a shift from emotional undereating to overeating, which suggests environmental influences in the development of overeating. The use of food by parents to control their child's emotions, rather than to teach them appropriate emotion regulation strategies, may impact the child's ability to regulate their own emotions, resulting in emotional overeating. We hypothesized that such coercive control practices with food by parents would be associated with poorer ability of the child to regulate their own emotions, which in turn would lead to increased emotional overeating, but not emotional undereating. Mothers of four- and five-year-olds (N = 221) were recruited through MTurk and Prolific to complete online questionnaires measuring food parenting practices (Comprehensive Feeding Style Questionnaire and Parent Feeding Style Questionnaire), child emotion regulation (Emotion Regulation Checklist), and child emotional eating (Child Eating Behavior Questionnaire). Several mediation models were tested. Parent's use of food to control emotions and behavior was associated with higher levels of emotional overeating, which was mediated by poorer child emotion regulation. However, child emotion regulation did not mediate the association between parent's use of food to control emotions and behavior and the child's emotional undereating. Taken together, these models suggest that parent's use of coercive control with food may lead to child emotional overeating, but not emotional undereating, by teaching children to regulate their emotions through eating rather than more adaptive regulation strategies. Future experimental and longitudinal studies are needed to directly test the nature and direction of these associations and whether coercive control with food teaches children to overeat in response to their emotions in lieu of using appropriate emotion regulation strategies.
情绪性暴食是指为了应对情绪而进食。在学龄前,情绪性进食不足会转变为暴食,这表明环境因素在暴食的发展中起到了影响。父母用食物来控制孩子的情绪,而不是教导他们适当的情绪调节策略,可能会影响孩子调节自身情绪的能力,导致情绪性暴食。我们假设,父母如此强制性地用食物来控制孩子,会使孩子调节自身情绪的能力变差,进而导致情绪性暴食增加,而不是情绪性进食不足。我们通过 MTurk 和 Prolific 招募了 4 岁和 5 岁儿童的母亲(N=221),让她们完成在线问卷,以测量父母的饮食行为(综合喂养风格问卷和父母喂养风格问卷)、儿童情绪调节(情绪调节检查表)和儿童情绪性进食(儿童进食行为问卷)。我们测试了几种中介模型。父母用食物来控制情绪和行为的做法与情绪性暴食程度呈正相关,而这种相关性是由儿童情绪调节能力较差所介导的。然而,儿童情绪调节并不能介导父母用食物来控制情绪和行为与儿童情绪性进食不足之间的关系。综上所述,这些模型表明,父母使用强制性的食物控制方法可能会导致孩子出现情绪性暴食,而不是情绪性进食不足,因为这种方法是通过让孩子通过进食来调节情绪,而不是通过更适应的调节策略。未来需要进行实验和纵向研究,以直接检验这些关联的性质和方向,以及食物强制性控制是否教会孩子在情绪反应时通过过度进食来代替使用适当的情绪调节策略。