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. 2024 Jun;43(6):448-461.
doi: 10.1037/hea0001340. Epub 2024 Feb 26.

Eating behaviors as pathways from early childhood adversity to adolescent cardiometabolic risk

Affiliations

Eating behaviors as pathways from early childhood adversity to adolescent cardiometabolic risk

Jenalee R Doom et al. Health Psychol. 2024 Jun.

Abstract

Objective: To identify specific eating behavior pathways that mediate associations between financial difficulties, negative life events, and maternal depressive symptoms from 0 to 5 years and cardiometabolic risk in adolescence.

Method: Hypotheses were tested with data from birth to age 15 years using the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children, a birth cohort in the United Kingdom (n = 3,887 for current analyses). Mothers reported on financial difficulties, negative life events, and maternal depressive symptoms at multiple points from 0 to 5 years and reported on worry about child overeating at 8 years. Youth self-reported restrained, emotional, and external eating at age 14. Youth completed a cardiometabolic health assessment at age 15 where waist circumference, triglycerides, high-density lipoprotein, and insulin resistance were measured. Longitudinal structural equation modeling with bootstrapping was used to test mediation models.

Results: Greater negative life events and maternal depressive symptoms predicted greater parental worry about child overeating at age 8, which directly predicted greater restrained and emotional eating at 14 and cardiometabolic risk at 15. Restrained and emotional eating at 14 directly predicted greater cardiometabolic risk at age 15.

Conclusions: Negative life events and maternal depressive symptoms in infancy/early childhood are associated with cardiometabolic risk in adolescence through pathways of parental worry about child overeating in middle childhood and youth-reported restrained and emotional eating in adolescence. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).

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Conflict of interest statement

Conflicts of interest: We have no conflicts of interest to disclose.

Figures

Figure 1.
Figure 1.
Conceptual model of mediators between financial difficulties, negative life events, and maternal depressive symptoms from 0–5 years and cardiometabolic risk in adolescence.
Figure 2.
Figure 2.
Paths from financial difficulties, negative life events, and maternal depressive symptoms from 0–5 years to cardiometabolic risk at 15 years through parent- and self-reported eating behaviors at 8 and 14 years. N = 3887. Values are standardized coefficients. Solid blue lines represent statistically significant pathways (p < .05). *p<.05, **p<.01, ***p<.001.
Figure 3.
Figure 3.
Paths from financial difficulties, negative life events, and maternal depressive symptoms from 0–5 years to cardiometabolic risk at 15 years through parent- and self-reported eating behaviors at 8 and 14 years, after covarying BMI at 8 and 14 years. N = 2995 (lower n than the main model as it only includes those who had valid BMI values at both 8 and 14 years). Values are standardized coefficients. Solid blue lines represent statistically significant pathways (p < .05). *p<.05, **p<.01, ***p<.001.

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