Harmful Experiences Associated with Emotional Eating of Iranian Obese Women: A Phenomenological Study

E. Ebrahimi, Fatemeh Mohammadi Shirmahaleh, M. Habibi, M. M. Hamooleh
{"title":"Harmful Experiences Associated with Emotional Eating of Iranian Obese Women: A Phenomenological Study","authors":"E. Ebrahimi, Fatemeh Mohammadi Shirmahaleh, M. Habibi, M. M. Hamooleh","doi":"10.52547/ijn.34.132.47","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Background & Aims: Emotional eating is defined as the tendency to eat in response to stress or negative emotions in order to overcome negative emotions. According to research evidence, emotional eating is harmful to health. For example, emotional eating is associated with weight gain, increased risk of type 2 diabetes, metabolic syndrome, high blood pressure, and hyperlipidemia. Therefore, it is important to identify the factors that cause emotional eating to be harmful, as it helps us to get a deeper insight into emotional eating and its harms and plan more effective educational and psychological interventions to manage emotional eating. To do this, we need to analyze the experiences of people who have had emotional eating, to explore and explain this behavior from their point of view. As a result, we can identify the various psychological, social, and cultural dimensions of emotional eating. In addition, research evidence shows that emotional eating is more common in obese people than normal weight people, and women are more vulnerable to emotional eating than men. In addition to being universal, emotional eating behavior also has culture-related characteristics. According to these points, the aim of this study was to explain the harmfulness of emotional eating in young Iranian obese women. Materials & Methods: The present study was conducted using a qualitative method and a hermeneutic phenomenological approach in 2020. Participants in this study were 17 young women aged 25 45 years living in Kermanshah or Karaj, with emotional eating experience and a body mass index of 30 or higher. Pregnant women were not included in this study due to their different body mass index. Participants were selected using purposive sampling method with maximum diversity approach. Data were collected through in-depth individual and face-to-face interviews. Sampling and interviews continued until the data saturation stage. The main questions asked of the participants during the interview were as follows: 1) Describe one of your emotional eating experiences and explain the thoughts, ideas, emotions and physical feelings that led you to eat at that time. 2) What other experience in your life is similar to this experience, and what does it mean to you? 3) Under what circumstances do you have the most emotional eating? And what do you think the relationship between these conditions and emotional eating means? 4) What is the difference between the times when you eat emotionally and the times when you eat normally? Also, exploratory questions were asked to analyze the deeper layers of the participants' lived experiences. Some of the exploratory questions asked in the present study were as follows: What did you mean by ....? Could you explain more? Please give an example in this regard? Data analysis began at the same time as data collection process. Dickelman's 7-step method was used to analyze the data. Results: In data analysis, a major theme emerged called \"harmful companions\" which showed that while participants experienced emotional eating, some other experiences accompanied their emotional eating, causing emotional eating to be harmful for these people. The main theme of \"harmful companions\" consists of seven subthemes named lack of self-control in eating behavior, unconscious eating, body abuse, contradictory experiences, eating addiction, excessive eating of certain foods, and secretive eating. Lack of self-control in eating behavior . Department of Psychology, Karaj Branch, Islamic Azad University, Karaj, Iran . Department of Psychology, Karaj Branch, Islamic Azad University, Karaj, Iran (Corresponding author) Tel:09126081389 Email:Fatemeh.mohamadi@kiau.ac.ir . Health Promotion Research Center, Department of Health Psychology, School of Behavioral Sciences & Mental Health, Iran University of Medical Sciences. Tehran, Iran . Department of Psychiatric Nursing, Nursing Care Research Center, School of Nursing and Midwifery, Iran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran D ow nl oa de d fr om ij n. iu m s. ac .ir a t 7 :3 0 IR S T o n T hu rs da y N ov em be r 25 th 2 02 1 ناریا یراتسرپ هیرشن هرود 34 هرامش / 132 / نابآ هام 1400 means that emotional eaters do not have enough control over their eating behavior and their emotional eating is accompanied by fast eating, overeating, eating regardless of food quality, swallowing unchewed food, eating at the wrong time, and etc. The subtheme of \"unconscious eating\" includes those experiences accompanying emotional eating that are not within the control of the conscious mind, and includes eating without consciousness, eating without will, eating involuntarily, eating without thinking, eating without purpose, unwanted eating, and eating without the right to choose. The subtheme of \"body abuse\" refers to the victimization of the body, especially the gastrointestinal tract, during emotional eating experiences, and includes distracting from negative emotions by engaging the mouth and stomach through eating, replacing pain caused by filling the stomach with psychological pain of anxiety and chewing foods with clenching teeth to vent anger. The subtheme of \"contradictory experiences\" includes the functions of positive and negative emotional eating and contradictions in attitude, feelings, and behavior of participants during emotional eating; Like enjoying eating but with a sense of shame for how you eat, eating pleasantly but with a guilty conscience; eating with craving but without pleasure, eating with craving but unwanted and the necessity of eating unnecessary. The subtheme of \"eating addiction\" includes quasi-addictive traits found in emotional eaters, such as; mental temptation to eat, eating out of habit, physical urge to eat, psychological dependence on eating, compulsive eating, and searching behavior to find food. The subtheme of \"excessive eating of certain foods\" means that although the participants' overeating included a variety of foods; in particular, they ate more sugary foods, high caffeine foods, starchy or fatty foods, and highfat and salty snacks. The subtheme of \"secretive eating\" means that participants ate secretly to avoid negative judgments and blame for their overeating, or that secretive eating was to passively eat their share of the food. Conclusion: The results of this study showed that emotional eating alone is not harmful, but some other experiences that accompany it, cause it to be harmful in physical, psychological, and social dimensions. An interesting finding of this study is the sub-theme of \"body abuse\". This sub-theme expresses the need for people to maintain their mental cohesion even at the cost of harming their body. Another important point of this study is that; the \"harmful companions\" of emotional eating that emerged in the form of seven sub-themes complicate the cognition and management of emotional eating, and it is necessary to pay attention to harmful companions in psychotherapy programs to manage emotional overeating especially in women.","PeriodicalId":159095,"journal":{"name":"Iran Journal of Nursing","volume":"11 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2021-10-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Iran Journal of Nursing","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.52547/ijn.34.132.47","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background & Aims: Emotional eating is defined as the tendency to eat in response to stress or negative emotions in order to overcome negative emotions. According to research evidence, emotional eating is harmful to health. For example, emotional eating is associated with weight gain, increased risk of type 2 diabetes, metabolic syndrome, high blood pressure, and hyperlipidemia. Therefore, it is important to identify the factors that cause emotional eating to be harmful, as it helps us to get a deeper insight into emotional eating and its harms and plan more effective educational and psychological interventions to manage emotional eating. To do this, we need to analyze the experiences of people who have had emotional eating, to explore and explain this behavior from their point of view. As a result, we can identify the various psychological, social, and cultural dimensions of emotional eating. In addition, research evidence shows that emotional eating is more common in obese people than normal weight people, and women are more vulnerable to emotional eating than men. In addition to being universal, emotional eating behavior also has culture-related characteristics. According to these points, the aim of this study was to explain the harmfulness of emotional eating in young Iranian obese women. Materials & Methods: The present study was conducted using a qualitative method and a hermeneutic phenomenological approach in 2020. Participants in this study were 17 young women aged 25 45 years living in Kermanshah or Karaj, with emotional eating experience and a body mass index of 30 or higher. Pregnant women were not included in this study due to their different body mass index. Participants were selected using purposive sampling method with maximum diversity approach. Data were collected through in-depth individual and face-to-face interviews. Sampling and interviews continued until the data saturation stage. The main questions asked of the participants during the interview were as follows: 1) Describe one of your emotional eating experiences and explain the thoughts, ideas, emotions and physical feelings that led you to eat at that time. 2) What other experience in your life is similar to this experience, and what does it mean to you? 3) Under what circumstances do you have the most emotional eating? And what do you think the relationship between these conditions and emotional eating means? 4) What is the difference between the times when you eat emotionally and the times when you eat normally? Also, exploratory questions were asked to analyze the deeper layers of the participants' lived experiences. Some of the exploratory questions asked in the present study were as follows: What did you mean by ....? Could you explain more? Please give an example in this regard? Data analysis began at the same time as data collection process. Dickelman's 7-step method was used to analyze the data. Results: In data analysis, a major theme emerged called "harmful companions" which showed that while participants experienced emotional eating, some other experiences accompanied their emotional eating, causing emotional eating to be harmful for these people. The main theme of "harmful companions" consists of seven subthemes named lack of self-control in eating behavior, unconscious eating, body abuse, contradictory experiences, eating addiction, excessive eating of certain foods, and secretive eating. Lack of self-control in eating behavior . Department of Psychology, Karaj Branch, Islamic Azad University, Karaj, Iran . Department of Psychology, Karaj Branch, Islamic Azad University, Karaj, Iran (Corresponding author) Tel:09126081389 Email:Fatemeh.mohamadi@kiau.ac.ir . Health Promotion Research Center, Department of Health Psychology, School of Behavioral Sciences & Mental Health, Iran University of Medical Sciences. Tehran, Iran . Department of Psychiatric Nursing, Nursing Care Research Center, School of Nursing and Midwifery, Iran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran D ow nl oa de d fr om ij n. iu m s. ac .ir a t 7 :3 0 IR S T o n T hu rs da y N ov em be r 25 th 2 02 1 ناریا یراتسرپ هیرشن هرود 34 هرامش / 132 / نابآ هام 1400 means that emotional eaters do not have enough control over their eating behavior and their emotional eating is accompanied by fast eating, overeating, eating regardless of food quality, swallowing unchewed food, eating at the wrong time, and etc. The subtheme of "unconscious eating" includes those experiences accompanying emotional eating that are not within the control of the conscious mind, and includes eating without consciousness, eating without will, eating involuntarily, eating without thinking, eating without purpose, unwanted eating, and eating without the right to choose. The subtheme of "body abuse" refers to the victimization of the body, especially the gastrointestinal tract, during emotional eating experiences, and includes distracting from negative emotions by engaging the mouth and stomach through eating, replacing pain caused by filling the stomach with psychological pain of anxiety and chewing foods with clenching teeth to vent anger. The subtheme of "contradictory experiences" includes the functions of positive and negative emotional eating and contradictions in attitude, feelings, and behavior of participants during emotional eating; Like enjoying eating but with a sense of shame for how you eat, eating pleasantly but with a guilty conscience; eating with craving but without pleasure, eating with craving but unwanted and the necessity of eating unnecessary. The subtheme of "eating addiction" includes quasi-addictive traits found in emotional eaters, such as; mental temptation to eat, eating out of habit, physical urge to eat, psychological dependence on eating, compulsive eating, and searching behavior to find food. The subtheme of "excessive eating of certain foods" means that although the participants' overeating included a variety of foods; in particular, they ate more sugary foods, high caffeine foods, starchy or fatty foods, and highfat and salty snacks. The subtheme of "secretive eating" means that participants ate secretly to avoid negative judgments and blame for their overeating, or that secretive eating was to passively eat their share of the food. Conclusion: The results of this study showed that emotional eating alone is not harmful, but some other experiences that accompany it, cause it to be harmful in physical, psychological, and social dimensions. An interesting finding of this study is the sub-theme of "body abuse". This sub-theme expresses the need for people to maintain their mental cohesion even at the cost of harming their body. Another important point of this study is that; the "harmful companions" of emotional eating that emerged in the form of seven sub-themes complicate the cognition and management of emotional eating, and it is necessary to pay attention to harmful companions in psychotherapy programs to manage emotional overeating especially in women.
查看原文
分享 分享
微信好友 朋友圈 QQ好友 复制链接
本刊更多论文
伊朗肥胖妇女情绪化进食的有害经历:一项现象学研究
背景与目的:情绪性饮食被定义为为了克服负面情绪而对压力或负面情绪做出反应的饮食倾向。根据研究证据,情绪化进食对健康有害。例如,情绪化进食与体重增加、患2型糖尿病、代谢综合征、高血压和高脂血症的风险增加有关。因此,确定导致情绪性饮食有害的因素是很重要的,因为它有助于我们更深入地了解情绪性饮食及其危害,并计划更有效的教育和心理干预来管理情绪性饮食。要做到这一点,我们需要分析那些情绪化进食的人的经历,从他们的角度来探索和解释这种行为。因此,我们可以识别情绪进食的各种心理、社会和文化层面。此外,研究证据表明,情绪化进食在肥胖人群中比正常体重的人更常见,女性比男性更容易受到情绪化进食的影响。情绪化饮食行为除了具有普遍性外,还具有与文化相关的特征。根据这些观点,本研究的目的是解释情绪化进食对伊朗年轻肥胖女性的危害。材料与方法:本研究于2020年采用定性方法和解释学现象学方法进行。这项研究的参与者是17名年龄在25岁至45岁之间的年轻女性,她们生活在克尔曼沙阿或卡拉杰,有情绪化饮食经历,体重指数在30或更高。由于孕妇的身体质量指数不同,因此没有包括在这项研究中。采用最大多样性的有目的抽样方法进行调查。通过深入的个人访谈和面对面访谈收集数据。抽样和访谈一直持续到数据饱和阶段。在访谈中,参与者被问到的主要问题如下:1)描述你的一次情绪化进食经历,并解释当时导致你进食的思想、想法、情绪和身体感受。2)在你的生活中还有什么类似的经历,它对你来说意味着什么?3)在什么情况下吃东西最情绪化?你认为这些情况和情绪化进食之间的关系意味着什么?4)情绪化进食的时候和正常进食的时候有什么区别?此外,研究人员还提出了一些探索性问题,以分析参与者生活经历的更深层次。本研究中提出的一些探索性问题如下:....是什么意思?你能再解释一下吗?请举例说明。数据分析与数据收集过程同时开始。采用Dickelman七步法对数据进行分析。结果:在数据分析中,出现了一个名为“有害同伴”的主题,该主题表明,当参与者经历情绪性饮食时,一些其他经历伴随着他们的情绪性饮食,导致情绪性饮食对这些人有害。“有害同伴”的主题由饮食行为缺乏自制力、无意识进食、身体虐待、矛盾经历、饮食成瘾、过度食用特定食物、秘密进食等七个副主题组成。饮食行为缺乏自制力。伊朗伊斯兰阿扎德大学卡拉伊分校心理学系。伊朗伊斯兰阿扎德大学卡拉伊分校心理学系(通讯作者)电话:09126081389邮箱:Fatemeh.mohamadi@kiau.ac.ir。伊朗医科大学行为科学与心理健康学院健康心理学系健康促进研究中心。伊朗德黑兰。吞下未咀嚼的食物,在错误的时间吃东西等等。“无意识进食”的副主题包括那些伴随情绪进食的不受意识控制的经历,包括没有意识地进食、没有意志地进食、不自觉地进食、没有思考地进食、没有目的地进食、不想要的进食和没有选择权的进食。 “身体虐待”的副主题是指在情绪化的进食过程中对身体,尤其是胃肠道的伤害,包括通过进食来吸引嘴和胃来转移负面情绪,用焦虑的心理痛苦来代替填饱胃带来的痛苦,用咬紧牙关咀嚼食物来发泄愤怒。“矛盾体验”的副主题包括积极和消极情绪进食的功能以及参与者在情绪进食过程中态度、感受和行为上的矛盾;喜欢享受吃饭的乐趣,但对自己吃的方式感到羞耻;吃得愉快,但却感到内疚;吃得有渴望却没有快乐,吃得有渴望却没有欲望,吃得没有必要。“饮食成瘾”的副主题包括在情绪化进食者中发现的准成瘾特征,例如;心理上的进食诱惑、习惯性进食、生理上的进食冲动、心理上的进食依赖、强迫性进食、寻找食物的行为。“某些食物的暴饮暴食”的副主题意味着,虽然参与者的暴饮暴食包括各种各样的食物;特别是,他们吃更多的含糖食物、高咖啡因食物、淀粉或脂肪食物,以及高脂肪和咸的零食。“秘密进食”的副主题意味着参与者秘密进食以避免负面评价和对他们暴饮暴食的指责,或者秘密进食是被动地吃掉他们的那份食物。结论:这项研究的结果表明,情绪化进食本身是无害的,但伴随它的一些其他经历,会导致它在身体、心理和社会方面有害。这项研究的一个有趣的发现是“身体虐待”的子主题。这个副主题表达了人们需要保持他们的精神凝聚力,即使以伤害他们的身体为代价。这项研究的另一个重点是;情绪性暴饮暴食的“有害伴侣”以七个子主题的形式出现,使对情绪性暴饮暴食的认知和管理复杂化,在心理治疗项目中需要注意有害伴侣,以管理情绪性暴饮暴食,特别是女性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
求助全文
约1分钟内获得全文 去求助
来源期刊
自引率
0.00%
发文量
0
期刊最新文献
Effect of Hope Therapy-based Education on the Rumination of Women With Breast Cancer The Experience of Implementing the Welcoming Nurse Program in Iran Psychiatric Center: Quality Improvement Indirect Patient Care by Nurses in the Intensive Care Unit of a Hospital in Iran During the COVID-19 Pandemic The Need to Conduct Studies on Economic Evaluation of Nursing Care in Iran Resilience Level of the Family Caregivers of the Elderly in Mashhad, Iran During the COVID-19 Pandemic
×
引用
GB/T 7714-2015
复制
MLA
复制
APA
复制
导出至
BibTeX EndNote RefMan NoteFirst NoteExpress
×
×
提示
您的信息不完整,为了账户安全,请先补充。
现在去补充
×
提示
您因"违规操作"
具体请查看互助需知
我知道了
×
提示
现在去查看 取消
×
提示
确定
0
微信
客服QQ
Book学术公众号 扫码关注我们
反馈
×
意见反馈
请填写您的意见或建议
请填写您的手机或邮箱
已复制链接
已复制链接
快去分享给好友吧!
我知道了
×
扫码分享
扫码分享
Book学术官方微信
Book学术文献互助
Book学术文献互助群
群 号:481959085
Book学术
文献互助 智能选刊 最新文献 互助须知 联系我们:info@booksci.cn
Book学术提供免费学术资源搜索服务,方便国内外学者检索中英文文献。致力于提供最便捷和优质的服务体验。
Copyright © 2023 Book学术 All rights reserved.
ghs 京公网安备 11010802042870号 京ICP备2023020795号-1