Disordered eating and eating competence in members of online irritable bowel syndrome support groups

Author:

Evans Kate M.1ORCID,Averill Michelle M.2,Harris Cristen L.3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Nutritional Sciences Program, School of Public Health University of Washington Seattle Washington USA

2. Nutritional Sciences Program, Department of Environmental and Occupational Health Sciences, School of Public Health University of Washington Seattle Washington USA

3. Nutritional Sciences Program, Department of Epidemiology, School of Public Health University of Washington Seattle Washington USA

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundThis study seeks to evaluate eating competence and disordered eating likelihood among members of online support groups for irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) and determine whether eating competence and disordered eating likelihood varies according to IBS symptom severity and subtype.MethodsThis cross‐sectional study is based on an anonymous survey conducted from August to September 2021. Adults with IBS (N = 225) were recruited from online and social media IBS support forums. IBS symptom severity was assessed using the validated IBS Severity Scoring System (IBS‐SSS), likelihood of disordered eating was assessed using the validated Eating Attitudes Test (EAT‐26), and eating competence was assessed using the validated Satter Eating Competence Inventory (ecSI 2.0™). Multiple linear regression was used to predict EAT‐26 total score from IBS‐SSS score, age, and IBS subtype. ANOVAs were used to examine the relationships between IBS severity level, IBS subtype, and ecSI 2.0™ total score.Key ResultsEating competence among the sample was low at 17% while 27% was classified as likely or very likely disordered eating. IBS severity was positively associated with EAT‐26 score (p = 0.011) and ecSI 2.0™ score was significantly lower in the severe IBS group compared to the moderate IBS group (p = 0.016). No relationship was detected between IBS subtype and EAT‐26 or ecSI 2.0™ scores.Conclusions & InferencesIBS severity was positively associated with disordered eating likelihood and negatively associated with eating competence. This sheds light on the importance of assessing eating competence and screening for disordered eating prior to selecting therapies for patients with IBS, particularly in females with severe symptoms.

Funder

National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Gastroenterology,Endocrine and Autonomic Systems,Physiology

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