Zissu Bar, Sher Helene, Slobodin Ortal
School of Education, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, 84105, Beer Sheva, Israel.
Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Soroka University Medical Center, Beer Sheva, Israel.
J Eat Disord. 2025 Jul 12;13(1):137. doi: 10.1186/s40337-025-01317-8.
Eating disorders may be transmitted from one generation to the others through various trajectories, including genetic and epigenetic factors, parent-child relationships, and behavioral factors. In the current study, we examined whether parents' eating disorder symptoms and sociocultural attitudes toward appearance are associated with the diagnosis of an eating disorder or the level of eating disorder symptoms among female adolescents and young adults, and the nature of these associations. We also examined whether fathers' and mothers' effects on offsprings' eating disorder symptoms interact.
The study included 65 triads of mothers, fathers, and their female offspring aged 11-22 (N = 195). Thirty-two offspring were diagnosed with an eating disorder and recruited from the in-patient eating disorder unit in a public hospital. The remaining 33 offspring, who formed the control group, were recruited via social media platforms.
In contrast to our expectations and previous findings, mothers' and fathers' levels of eating disorder symptoms and sociocultural attitudes toward appearance were negatively associated with their offspring's eating disorder symptoms. Also, inconsistent with mental health studies that showed that the behaviors and attitudes of one parent are exacerbated or attenuated by the other parent, we failed to find an interaction effect between mothers' and fathers' variables on their offspring's level of eating disorder symptoms.
The current study adds to the limited number of studies that focused on fathers in the transgenerational transmission of eating disorders and encourages further research on the effects of each parent and the combined effects of both in the development and maintenance of eating disorders in their offspring.
饮食失调可能通过多种途径在代际间传播,包括遗传和表观遗传因素、亲子关系及行为因素。在本研究中,我们探究了父母的饮食失调症状以及社会文化对外表的态度是否与女性青少年和青年的饮食失调诊断或饮食失调症状水平相关,以及这些关联的性质。我们还研究了父亲和母亲对后代饮食失调症状的影响是否相互作用。
该研究纳入了65组母亲、父亲及其11至22岁的女性后代(N = 195)。32名后代被诊断为饮食失调,她们是从一家公立医院的住院饮食失调科室招募的。其余33名后代组成了对照组,是通过社交媒体平台招募的。
与我们的预期和先前的研究结果相反,母亲和父亲的饮食失调症状水平以及社会文化对外表的态度与他们后代的饮食失调症状呈负相关。此外,与心理健康研究结果不一致(心理健康研究表明一方父母的行为和态度会因另一方父母而加剧或减弱),我们未发现母亲和父亲的变量对其后代饮食失调症状水平存在交互作用。
本研究增加了在饮食失调代际传播中关注父亲的有限研究数量,并鼓励进一步研究父母各自的影响以及两者在其后代饮食失调发展和维持过程中的综合影响。