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ORIGINAL ARTICLE

Restrained eating in overweight children: Does eating style run in families?

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Pages 97-103 | Received 21 Sep 2006, Published online: 12 Jul 2009
 

Abstract

Overweight children show abnormalities in eating style, such as restrained eating and tendency toward overeating (comprising both emotional and external eating). Family surroundings play a major role in developing eating behaviors in children. We tested whether restrained eating and tendency toward overeating predicted the amount of food intake in 41 overweight children (23 girls and 18 boys) and their parents (40 mothers and 11 fathers) after receiving a preload. We further investigated with questionnaires whether there were associations between the parents’ and their children's eating behavior and whether mothers’ food intake predicted the amount of food consumed by children in an experimental trial. We found that neither children with restrained eating nor their mothers ate more after a preload, but children with a high tendency toward overeating ate somewhat more after receiving a preload. Further analyses showed that children's food intake in the preload paradigm was predicted by mothers’ food intake. Our findings point to a familial transmission of eating styles: children eat as their primary caregivers do, even when the caregivers are not present in the laboratory.

Acknowledgements

The treatment trial was funded by the Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF 3251-067078), which supports research projects of general interest to the Swiss public. The SNF approved the initial study design and is informed yearly about the progress of the ongoing study but does not interfere with the scientific content or results. The publication of the results is done independently of the SNF. The principal investigator (Simone Munsch) has full access to all the data in the study and takes responsibility for the integrity of the data and the accuracy of the data analysis.

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