Friendship Influences Eating Behavior, Particularly When Friends Are Overweight
Main Category: Pediatrics / Children's HealthAlso Included In: Obesity / Weight Loss / Fitness; Psychology / Psychiatry
Article Date: 04 Aug 2009 - 4:00 PDT
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A new study of childhood obesity in the United States has found that some social factors, such as the presence of friends, may put overweight youths at greater risk of overeating.
The research, published in the August issue of the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, demonstrates that friends may act as "permission givers" on children's food intake.
"These results are important, considering the role of friends as agents of change in childhood and adolescence," said Sarah Salvy, Ph.D., assistant professor in the Division of Behavioral Medicine, Department of Pediatrics, University at Buffalo School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences.
"Overweight children are more likely to find food more reinforcing than non-overweight youth," she continued. "Being in the company of overweight peers may give them the permission to eat more or may decrease their inhibitions, increasing what are seen as the norms of appropriate eating, or how much one should eat."
The study involved 23 overweight and 42 normal weight children between the ages of 9 and 15, who were randomized to participate with either a friend or an unfamiliar person of a similar age. After randomization, there were 33 friend pairs and 39 "unfamiliar" pairs.
Before taking part in the study experiment, participants listed what they had eaten in the past 24 hours to make sure they hadn't eaten anything during the previous two hours, and rated their hunger level.
Each participant pair spent 45 minutes in a room equipped with games, puzzles and individual bowls of low-calorie, "nutrient dense" baby carrots and grapes, and high-calorie "energy-dense" potato chips and cookies. The children were told they could eat as much or as little as they wanted, but were asked to eat from their own bowls only.
Researchers observed the children via closed-circuit television and recorded their activities. At the end of the session, they weighed the snacks that weren't eaten to determine how much each participant had consumed and to calculate calories.
Results showed that friends who ate together consumed more food than participants who were paired with someone they didn't know, and that friends were more likely to eat similar amounts than participants paired with a stranger.
However, overweight children who were paired with an overweight peer, whether friend or stranger, ate more than the overweight participants who were paired with a normal weight youth.
"These findings indicate that both overweight and normal weight participants eating with a friend ate significantly more than did participants eating in the presence of an unfamiliar peer," Salvy said. "These results are consistent with research in adults, which showed that eating among friends and family is distinctly different than eating among strangers.
"Given the impact of friends on eating behavior, it appears that if we hope to change the growing obesity epidemic among children, friends and family need to be involved," said Salvy. "If the environment in which children live doesn't change -- if family meals remain high calorie and overeating is the norm -- any progress children may make in their eating behavior won't last."
Salvy currently is investigating the influence of a parent versus a friend on children's and adolescents' eating behavior.
Marlana Howard and Erica Mele, UB bachelor's degree candidates who worked with Salvy, and Margaret Read, UB senior research specialist, also contributed to the study.
The research was supported by a grant to Salvy from the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development.
Source:
Lois Baker
University at Buffalo
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Weight Bias Alert
posted by Deb Burgard Ph.D. on 5 Aug 2009 at 7:46 amI would respectfully ask the researchers to check the weight bias involved in this investigation and interpretation. Contrary to myth, body size is not a good proxy for intake or how "reinforcing" eating is. Instead of seeing the "overweight" youth as pathological or overeaters, as an eating disorders specialist I would suggest you re-think the whole experiment from the standpoint of the norms among teenage girls for anorexic levels of intake. Perhaps the differences you are seeing are between a relatively normal intake among friends and heavier kids who are relieved, for the moment, not to have to do "impression management" with their peer, and the kids who see no evidence of permission to eat normally and who therefore maintain their restraint.
Until we have a weight-neutral culture, the heavier kids will always have to deal with the added social meaning of their eating behavior in public. The thin kids don't escape this either, It sets up a high potential for reactive eating behind the scenes, and this is true for kids and youth of all sizes.
I don't think it is a good idea to propose restraint as a solution for higher weight kids when we diagnose it as eating disordered in lower weight kids. Restraint is bad when it succeeds, and the person's whole life revolves around restraining food, and it is a problem when it doesn't, and the person eats reactively when they aren't restraining.
Finally, I am very concerned that this sort of study will add to the shunning of fat friends, the anxiety of parents about their kids having fat friends, and the ability for fat friends to find each other and support each other in the face of the stigma they are subjected to. The public takeaway message is often a very different one from what the researchers may have intended.
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