Department of Psychiatry, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut, USA.
Department of Mental Health Data Science, New York Psychiatric Institute, New York, New York, USA.
Int J Eat Disord. 2024 Nov;57(11):2260-2268. doi: 10.1002/eat.24284. Epub 2024 Sep 2.
In cross-sectional and retrospective research, parental binge eating is associated with their children's eating psychopathology. The current study extended the evidence by cross-sectionally and longitudinally examining the relation between parental binge eating and binge eating and weight-control behaviors in the next generation of their adolescent children and young adult children in a population-based sample.
Adolescents (Time 1: M = 14.5, SD = 2.0 years) (n = 2367), followed into adulthood (Time 2: M = 22.1, SD = 2.0 years), and their parents (n = 3664) were enrolled in EAT 2010-2018 and Project F-EAT 2010. The current study examined parental binge eating, and child binge eating and weight-control behaviors. Adjusted models covaried for child gender, age, and race/ethnicity.
Approximately 7% of adolescents at Time 1 had at least one parent who reported binge eating with no differences by child's age, gender, or race/ethnicity. Having at least one parent experiencing binge eating at Time 1 (vs. not) was associated cross-sectionally with adolescent children's use of extreme weight-control behaviors (9.6% vs. 4.8%; Risk Difference [RD] = 4.9%) and associated longitudinally with binge eating during young adulthood (21.1% vs. 11.6%; RD = 9.5%). Other associations did not reach statistical significance.
Children of parents with binge eating appear to have elevated risk of extreme weight-control behaviors during adolescence and binge eating in young adulthood. Clinicians should assess whether eating psychopathology extends to other family members, and offer additional support to parents with binge eating. Further research is needed to identify risk factors in the children of parents with binge eating and to assess strategies for prevention.
在横断面和回顾性研究中,父母的暴食行为与子女的饮食心理病理学有关。本研究通过在基于人群的样本中,对青少年及其成年子女的父母暴食行为与暴食和体重控制行为的关系进行横断面和纵向研究,扩展了这方面的证据。
青少年(第 1 次测量:M=14.5,SD=2.0 岁)(n=2367),随访至成年(第 2 次测量:M=22.1,SD=2.0 岁),以及他们的父母(n=3664)参加了 EAT2010-2018 和 ProjectF-EAT2010。本研究调查了父母的暴食行为,以及孩子的暴食和体重控制行为。调整后的模型协变量包括儿童的性别、年龄和种族/民族。
大约 7%的青少年在第 1 次测量时至少有一位报告有暴食行为,而儿童的年龄、性别或种族/民族没有差异。在第 1 次测量时有至少一位父母经历暴食(而非没有)与青少年子女使用极端体重控制行为(9.6%vs.4.8%;风险差异[RD]=4.9%)呈横断面相关,与成年初期的暴食(21.1%vs.11.6%;RD=9.5%)呈纵向相关。其他关联没有达到统计学意义。
有暴食父母的孩子在青春期似乎有更高的极端体重控制行为和成年初期暴食的风险。临床医生应评估饮食心理病理学是否延伸到其他家庭成员,并为有暴食行为的父母提供额外的支持。需要进一步研究,以确定有暴食父母的孩子的风险因素,并评估预防策略。