Literature DB >> 11288779

Predicting children's reported eating disturbances at 8 years of age.

C Jacobi1, W S Agras, L Hammer.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To examine differential parental influences on eating attitudes and behaviors of 8-year-old children with a specific focus on gender effects and to assess the specificity of this relationship.
METHOD: One hundred eight infants were monitored from birth and interviewed at age 8 for eating disturbances and negative affect with an adaptation of the McKnight Risk Factor Survey. Parental measures included the Three Factor Eating Questionnaire subscales Disinhibition and Restraint as well as body mass index, assessed at study entry.
RESULTS: No gender differences were found for frequencies of children's self-reported eating disturbances. Higher maternal restraint scores predicted worries about being too fat in girls but not in boys. Higher maternal disinhibition scores also differentially predicted weight control behaviors in their daughters. Negative affect in the child was (weakly) predicted by higher maternal body mass index. No association between paternal predictors of disturbed eating and the child's eating disturbances and negative emotionality was found.
CONCLUSIONS: The impact of maternal eating disorders and disturbances is much stronger than that of fathers and is specifically directed at their daughters. The clinical importance of these disturbances in terms of precursors of adolescent eating disorders has to be determined by monitoring the sample through puberty.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11288779     DOI: 10.1097/00004583-200103000-00017

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry        ISSN: 0890-8567            Impact factor:   8.829


  7 in total

1.  Eating habits and attitudes among 10-year-old children of mothers with eating disorders: longitudinal study.

Authors:  Alan Stein; Helen Woolley; Sandra Cooper; Jonathan Winterbottom; Christopher G Fairburn; Mario Cortina-Borja
Journal:  Br J Psychiatry       Date:  2006-10       Impact factor: 9.319

2.  Maternal weight status modulates the effects of restriction on daughters' eating and weight.

Authors:  L A Francis; L L Birch
Journal:  Int J Obes (Lond)       Date:  2005-08       Impact factor: 5.095

3.  Parent overweight predicts daughters' increase in BMI and disinhibited overeating from 5 to 13 years.

Authors:  Lori A Francis; Alison K Ventura; Michele Marini; Leann L Birch
Journal:  Obesity (Silver Spring)       Date:  2007-06       Impact factor: 5.002

Review 4.  The influence of postnatal psychiatric disorder on child development. Is maternal preoccupation one of the key underlying processes?

Authors:  Alan Stein; Annukka Lehtonen; Allison G Harvey; Rosie Nicol-Harper; Michelle Craske
Journal:  Psychopathology       Date:  2008-11-20       Impact factor: 1.944

5.  Ethical family interventions for childhood obesity.

Authors:  Mandy L Perryman
Journal:  Prev Chronic Dis       Date:  2011-08-15       Impact factor: 2.830

6.  Prospective associations of parental smoking, alcohol use, marital status, maternal satisfaction, and parental and childhood body mass index at 6.5 years with later problematic eating attitudes.

Authors:  K H Wade; O Skugarevsky; M S Kramer; R Patel; N Bogdanovich; K Vilchuck; N Sergeichick; R Richmond; T Palmer; G Davey Smith; M Gillman; E Oken; R M Martin
Journal:  Nutr Diabetes       Date:  2014-01-06       Impact factor: 5.097

7.  Influence of various environmental factors on the growth of children and adolescents in Jeddah, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.

Authors:  Abdulmoein Eid Al-Agha; Alyaa Adam; Anhar Almaghrabi; Asmaa Zainalabidin; Hajar Mohammed Ahmed; Rawan A Almuwallad; Shaima H Aljahdali; Shuruq Alharbi; Wijdan Alhowig
Journal:  Acta Biomed       Date:  2020-03-19
  7 in total

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