Prevalence and correlates of addictive eating behaviours in a large cohort of Australian adolescents

Objective: Research shows highly palatable foods can elicit addictive eating behaviours or ‘food addiction’. Early adolescence is theorised to be a vulnerable period for the onset of addictive eating behaviours, yet minimal research has examined this. This study explored the prevalence and correlate...

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Veröffentlicht in:Australian and New Zealand journal of psychiatry 2023-08, Vol.57 (8), p.1172-1183
Hauptverfasser: Smout, Scarlett, Gardner, Lauren A, Champion, Katrina E, Osman, Bridie, Kihas, Ivana, Thornton, Louise, Teesson, Maree, Newton, Nicola C, Burrows, Tracy
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Objective: Research shows highly palatable foods can elicit addictive eating behaviours or ‘food addiction’. Early adolescence is theorised to be a vulnerable period for the onset of addictive eating behaviours, yet minimal research has examined this. This study explored the prevalence and correlates of addictive eating behaviours in a large early adolescent sample. Methods: 6640 Australian adolescents (Mage = 12.7 ± 0.5, 49%F) completed an online survey. Addictive eating was measured with the Child Yale Food Addiction Scale (YFAS-C). Negative-binomial generalised linear models examined associations between addictive eating symptoms and high psychological distress, energy drink consumption, sugar-sweetened beverage (SSB) consumption, alcohol use, and cigarette use. Results: Mean YFAS-C symptom criteria count was 1.36 ± 1.47 (of 7). 18.3% of participants met 3+ symptoms, 7.5% endorsed impairment and 5.3% met the diagnostic threshold for food addiction. All examined behavioural and mental health variables were significantly associated with addictive eating symptoms. Effects were largest for high psychological distress and cigarette use; with those exhibiting high psychological distress meeting 0.65 more criteria (95%CI = 0.58–0.72, p 
ISSN:0004-8674
1440-1614
DOI:10.1177/00048674231165201