Relationships between retrospective parental feeding practices and Chinese university students’ current appetitive traits, weight status, and satisfaction with food-related life

Abstract

Accumulating evidence suggests that parental feeding practices during childhood are related to adults’ eating behaviors and weight status, but research exploring these relationships were limited and largely conducted in Western contexts. However, China, a country holds the largest world population, has distinct patterns of eating habits and food culture from Western countries. Therefore, the present study aimed to examine relationships between retrospective parental feeding practices (e.g., concern, monitoring, pressure to eat, and restriction) and current body mass index (BMI) and satisfaction with food-related life in a sample of 476 Chinese young adults (195 men) with a mean age of 19.78 (SD = 1.23) years. We also examined whether appetitive traits mediated these associations. Retrospective parental feeding practices were significantly related with participants’ current BMI (concern: r = .26, p < .001; pressure to eat: r = -.15, p < .001) and satisfaction with food-related life (concern: r = .15, p < .001; monitoring: r = .12, p = .009; pressure to eat: r = .13, p = .006; restriction: r = .16, p < .001). Relationships were partially mediated by young adults’ current appetitive traits (e.g., enjoyment of food, emotional overeating, satiety responsiveness, slowness in eating). These findings suggest that retrospective parental feeding practices are important correlates of young adults’ current weight status and satisfaction with foodrelated life, and that appetitive traits partially explain these relationships in the Chinese context.

Publication
Appetite, 106061
WANG Qingyang
WANG Qingyang
Current Undergraduate Advisee in Marketing and Communication

My research interests include Consumer behavior, Eating consumption and health decision-making, Sustainable behavior and Consumer well-being.

CUI Shuqi
CUI Shuqi
PhD Student in Applied Psychology

CUI Shuqi (崔舒淇) is a PhD student in applied psychology under Prof. HE Jinbo’s supervision.

YU Yiman
YU Yiman
Undergraduate Student in Applied Psychology
LIU Yutian
LIU Yutian
Current Undergraduate Advisee in Applied Psychology
CUI Tianxiang
CUI Tianxiang
PhD Student in Psychology

My research interests include body image, eating behaviors, quantitative methods in psychology, and music psychology.

HE Jinbo
HE Jinbo
Assistant Professor in Applied Psychology

My research interests include the mental health of children and adolescents, obesity, eating behaviors, eating disorders, body image, and various advanced quantitative research methods (e.g., structural equation modeling, latent growth curve modeling, finite mixture modeling, meta-analysis).