Author:
Hussenoeder Felix S.,Conrad Ines,Engel Christoph,Zachariae Silke,Zeynalova Samira,Glaesmer Heide,Hinz Andreas,Witte Veronika,Tönjes Anke,Löffler Markus,Stumvoll Michael,Villringer Arno,Riedel-Heller Steffi G.
Abstract
AbstractAnxiety is a widespread phenomenon that affects various behaviors. We want to analyze in how far anxiety is connected to eating behaviors since this is one potential pathway to understanding eating-related health outcomes like obesity or eating disorders. We used data from the population-based LIFE-Adult-Study (n = 5019) to analyze the connection between anxiety (GAD-7) and the three dimensions of eating behaviors (FEV)—Cognitive Restraint, Disinhibition, and Hunger—while controlling for sociodemographic variables, smoking, physical activity, personality, and social support. Multivariate regression analyses showed significant positive associations between anxiety and Disinhibition as well as Hunger, but not between anxiety and Cognitive Restraint. Interventions that help individuals to better regulate and cope with anxiety, could be one potential pathway to reducing eating disorders and obesity in the population.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Cited by
15 articles.
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