Development and Validation of an Eating-Related Eco-Concern Questionnaire

Author:

Qi BaiyuORCID,Presseller Emily K.ORCID,Cooper Gabrielle E.,Kapadia Avantika,Dumain Alexis S.ORCID,Jayawickreme Shantal M.,Bulik-Sullivan Emily C.,van Furth Eric F.,Thornton Laura M.ORCID,Bulik Cynthia M.ORCID,Munn-Chernoff Melissa A.ORCID

Abstract

Eco-concern, the distress experienced relating to climate change, is associated with mental health, yet no study has examined disordered eating related to eco-concern. This study developed and validated a 10-item scale assessing Eating-Related Eco-Concern (EREC). Participants (n = 224) completed the EREC, Climate Change Worry Scale (CCWS), and Eating Disorder Examination-Questionnaire (EDE-Q). Construct validity, convergent validity, and internal consistency were evaluated. Sex differences in EREC were evaluated using t-tests. Associations among the EREC, CCWS, and EDE-Q were evaluated using linear regression models. Sensitivity analyses were conducted in individuals below EDE-Q global score clinical cut-offs. Factor analysis suggested that all items loaded adequately onto one factor. Pearson’s correlation and Bland–Altman analyses suggested strong correlation and acceptable agreement between the EREC and CCWS (r = 0.57), but weak correlation and low agreement with the EDE-Q global score (r = 0.14). The EREC had acceptable internal consistency (α = 0.88). No sex difference was observed in the EREC in the full sample; females had a significantly higher mean score than males in sensitivity analysis. The EREC was significantly positively associated with the CCWS and EDE-Q global and shape concern scores, but not in sensitivity analysis. The EREC is a brief, validated scale that can be useful to screen for eating-related eco-concern.

Funder

National Institute of Mental Health

Brain and Behavior Research Foundation

Swedish Research Council

Lundbeck Foundatio

National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Food Science,Nutrition and Dietetics

Reference56 articles.

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