Premium
Associations between objective physical activity and emotional eating among adiposity‐discordant siblings using ecological momentary assessment and accelerometers
Author(s) -
Smith Kathryn E.,
O'Connor Shan M.,
Mason Tyler B.,
Wang Shirlene,
Dzubur Eldin,
Crosby Ross D.,
Wonderlich Stephen A.,
Salvy SarahJeanne,
Feda Denise M.,
Roemmich James N.
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
pediatric obesity
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.226
H-Index - 69
eISSN - 2047-6310
pISSN - 2047-6302
DOI - 10.1111/ijpo.12720
Subject(s) - emotional eating , overweight , obesity , medicine , body mass index , physical activity , demography , clinical psychology , eating behavior , physical therapy , sociology
Summary Background Emotional eating is associated with obesity, though less is known regarding factors that predict emotional eating episodes in children and adolescents. Objectives To investigate whether moderate to vigorous physical activity (MVPA) or total activity counts 60 minutes prior to psychological stress predicted stress‐related eating and positive emotional eating (ie, eating while happy), and whether adiposity (z‐BMI) moderated these associations. Methods Participants were drawn from a prior study of siblings (N = 77; mean age = 15.4 ± 1.4 years) discordant for weight status (39 non‐overweight siblings, 38 siblings with overweight/obesity) who completed an ecological momentary assessment protocol with accelerometer‐based assessment of physical activity. Results Greater MVPA was associated with lower stress‐related eating across the sample. Lower total activity (between‐person effects) and lower MVPA (within‐person effects) were associated with greater stress‐related eating for siblings with greater z‐BMI. Greater total activity was associated with lower positive emotional eating for siblings with lower z‐BMI (between‐ and within‐person). Conclusions Findings demonstrate potential regulating effects of prior physical activity on emotional eating at the individual and momentary level, though there are nuances depending on z‐BMI. Future work is needed to examine underlying mechanisms and timescale of effects, and particularly the extent to which enhancing MVPA time among youth with z‐BMI may mitigate momentary risk of stress‐related eating episodes.