What influences the “when” of eating and sleeping?A qualitative interview study

Timing of eating relative to sleep and endogenous circadian rhythm impacts weight and cardiometabolic health. We used qualitative methods to explore what influences the “when” of eating and sleeping. We conducted 37 one-on-one semi-structured interviews among participants with a body mass index (BMI...

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Veröffentlicht in:Appetite 2021-01, Vol.156, p.104980-104980, Article 104980
Hauptverfasser: Goheer, Attia, Holzhauer, Katherine, Martinez, Jonathan, Woolf, Thomas, Coughlin, Janelle W., Martin, Lindsay, Zhao, Di, Lehmann, Harold, Clark, Jeanne M., Bennett, Wendy L.
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container_start_page 104980
container_title Appetite
container_volume 156
creator Goheer, Attia
Holzhauer, Katherine
Martinez, Jonathan
Woolf, Thomas
Coughlin, Janelle W.
Martin, Lindsay
Zhao, Di
Lehmann, Harold
Clark, Jeanne M.
Bennett, Wendy L.
description Timing of eating relative to sleep and endogenous circadian rhythm impacts weight and cardiometabolic health. We used qualitative methods to explore what influences the “when” of eating and sleeping. We conducted 37 one-on-one semi-structured interviews among participants with a body mass index (BMI) ≥ 25 kg/m2 recruited from three internal medicine clinics affiliated with an urban academic hospital. Participants (70.3% Female; 51.4% White; Age range: 21–83 years old) completed measures of social jetlag, physical activity, eating habits, and mobile application use and participated in interviews following a guide developed by the study team. Responses were recorded, transcribed and coded sequentially by two trained researchers using editing-style analysis to identify themes. We identified two main themes, each with subthemes: 1) influences on the “when” of eating and sleeping, with subthemes including social jetlag and being overscheduled, and 2) contextualizing beliefs and perceptions about the “when” of eating and sleeping, with subthemes including perceived recommendations for timing of eating and sleeping, and alignment of behaviors with perceived recommendations. Many participants noted being more flexible in their eating and sleeping times on work-free vs work days. The themes this study identified should be considered when designing interventions that influence the timing of eating and sleeping for weight management.
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subjects Behavioral Sciences
Circadian rhythm
Eating times
Life Sciences & Biomedicine
Nutrition & Dietetics
Obesity
Qualitative
Science & Technology
Social jetlag
title What influences the “when” of eating and sleeping?A qualitative interview study
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