Tecuta Lucia, Casu Giulia, Tomba Elena
Department of Psychology, University of Bologna, Bologna, Italy.
Front Psychol. 2024 Nov 27;15:1441561. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2024.1441561. eCollection 2024.
Urgent calls for research on the relationship between climate change concerns and eating disorder risk have been made. This study aimed to validate an Italian version of the Eating-Related Eco-Concern Questionnaire (EREC), a brief unidimensional measure of eating behaviors related to eco-concern.
Six hundred and sixty-three adults (85% females, mean age 37 ± 12 years) completed the EREC, Climate Change Worry Scale (CCWS), Eating Disorder Examination-Questionnaire (EDE-Q), Eating Habits Questionnaire for orthorexia nervosa symptoms (EHQ-21), and questions on dietary habits and motivations, and past experiences of extreme climate events.
Confirmatory factor analysis results indicated that the original one-factor model showed acceptable fit to the data after including the error covariation between two pairs of items. Internal consistency was adequate, and EREC scores correlated positively and strongly with CCWS scores. Participants scored significantly lower in EREC than in CCWS, indicating greater climate-related concerns in general terms than relating specifically to eating. While EREC was unrelated to EDE-Q scores, weak-to-moderate correlations were observed with EHQ-21 subscale and total scores. Pro-environmental and/or ethical reasons for current diet and personal experience of extreme climate events were associated with significantly higher EREC scores.
The Italian EREC appears to be a valid and reliable tool for the screening of eating-related concerns and behaviors related to climate change. Ecological concerns may represent a healthy adaptive response, but the EREC can serve as a valuable tool to identify individuals whose eating behaviors related to eco-concern might warrant further clinical attention due to potential risks of developing rigid or unhealthy patterns.
人们迫切呼吁开展关于气候变化担忧与饮食失调风险之间关系的研究。本研究旨在验证意大利版的饮食相关生态担忧问卷(EREC),这是一种用于衡量与生态担忧相关饮食行为的简短单维度测量工具。
663名成年人(85%为女性,平均年龄37±12岁)完成了EREC、气候变化担忧量表(CCWS)、饮食失调检查问卷(EDE-Q)、神经性正食症症状饮食习惯问卷(EHQ-21),以及关于饮食习惯和动机、过去极端气候事件经历的问题。
验证性因素分析结果表明,在纳入两对项目之间的误差协方差后,原始单因素模型对数据的拟合度可接受。内部一致性良好,EREC得分与CCWS得分呈显著正相关。参与者在EREC上的得分显著低于CCWS,表明总体上与气候相关的担忧大于与饮食具体相关的担忧。虽然EREC与EDE-Q得分无关,但与EHQ-21子量表和总分之间存在弱至中度相关性。当前饮食的环保和/或伦理原因以及极端气候事件的个人经历与显著更高的EREC得分相关。
意大利版EREC似乎是一种用于筛查与饮食相关的担忧以及与气候变化相关行为的有效且可靠的工具。生态担忧可能代表一种健康的适应性反应,但EREC可作为一种有价值的工具,用于识别那些因与生态担忧相关的饮食行为可能因发展为刻板或不健康模式的潜在风险而需要进一步临床关注的个体。