Maternal Mental Health Symptoms are Positively Related to Emotional and Restrained Eating Attitudes in a Statewide Sample of WIC Participants
TL;DRAbstract
The objective is to examine the association between maternal mental health and emotional and restrained eating attitudes. Data on 700 mothers of infants < 1 y from a statewide sample of the Maryland Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children (WIC) participants were collected via a telephone survey. Maternal mental health symptoms were measured on continuous scales for depression (PRIME‐MD), stress (Perceived Stress Scale), and anxiety (Spielberger State‐Trait Anxiety Inventory). Emotional and restrained eating were measured with questions adapted from the Dutch Eating Behavior Questionnaire, with respondents scoring in the upper quartile categorized as high emotional or restrained eating. Multivariate logistic regression was used in the analysis, adjusting for race/ethnicity, infant age, education level, and marital status. Mothers reporting emotional eating reported higher symptoms of depression (OR=4.65; 95% CI 3.12‐6.95), anxiety (OR=2.36; 95% CI 1.7‐
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The objective is to examine the association between maternal mental health and emotional and restrained eating attitudes. Data on 700 mothers of infants < 1 y from a statewide sample of the Maryland Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children (WIC) participants were collected via a telephone survey. Maternal mental health symptoms were measured on continuous scales for depression (PRIME‐MD), stress (Perceived Stress Scale), and anxiety (Spielberger State‐Trait Anxiety Inventory). Emotional and restrained eating were measured with questions adapted from the Dutch Eating Behavior Questionnaire, with respondents scoring in the upper quartile categorized as high emotional or restrained eating. Multivariate logistic regression was used in the analysis, adjusting for race/ethnicity, infant age, education level, and marital status. Mothers reporting emotional eating reported higher symptoms of depression (OR=4.65; 95% CI 3.12‐6.95), anxiety (OR=2.36; 95% CI 1.7‐
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