Family connectedness and sexual minority Asian Americans' eating behavior regulation

IF 2.6 3区 医学 Q2 PSYCHIATRY Eating behaviors Pub Date : 2023-09-16 DOI:10.1016/j.eatbeh.2023.101817
Thomas P. Le , Shahmir H. Ali , Annabelle L. Atkin , Terence H.W. Ching , Annamaria Csizmadia , Nguyen K. Tran , Ralph J. DiClemente
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Abstract

To date, psychosocial and interpersonal protective factors such as family connectedness have received little attention in studies of eating behaviors among sexual minority Asian Americans. Therefore, we investigated associations of family connectedness and two types of eating behavior regulation motives and the moderating role of individualism in these associations among 134 sexual minority Asian American young adults. Linear regression models assessed the main and interaction effects of family connectedness and individualism on introjected and identified eating behavior regulation motives. We observed a significant interaction effect between family connectedness and individualism only on introjected regulation. For participants with low levels of individualism, those who reported high levels of family connectedness had lower scores for introjected regulation of eating behavior. The findings of this study highlight the importance of examining strengths related to sexual minority Asian Americans by demonstrating the important role family connectedness plays in eating behavior regulation motives, particularly for those with lower individualism.

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家庭联系和性少数亚裔美国人的饮食行为规范。
到目前为止,在对性少数族裔亚裔美国人饮食行为的研究中,诸如家庭联系等心理社会和人际保护因素很少受到关注。因此,我们在134名性少数族裔亚裔美国年轻人中调查了家庭联系和两种类型的饮食行为调节动机的关联,以及个人主义在这些关联中的调节作用。线性回归模型评估了家庭联系和个人主义对插入和识别的饮食行为调节动机的主要影响和交互作用。我们观察到家庭联系和个人主义之间的显著交互作用仅在内向调节上。对于个人主义程度较低的参与者,那些报告家庭联系程度较高的人在饮食行为的内向调节方面得分较低。这项研究的发现强调了通过证明家庭联系在饮食行为调节动机中发挥的重要作用,特别是对那些个人主义较低的人来说,来检验与性少数族裔亚裔美国人相关的优势的重要性。
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来源期刊
Eating behaviors
Eating behaviors Multiple-
CiteScore
4.20
自引率
3.60%
发文量
65
审稿时长
60 days
期刊介绍: Eating Behaviors is an international peer-reviewed scientific journal publishing human research on the etiology, prevention, and treatment of obesity, binge eating, and eating disorders in adults and children. Studies related to the promotion of healthy eating patterns to treat or prevent medical conditions (e.g., hypertension, diabetes mellitus, cancer) are also acceptable. Two types of manuscripts are encouraged: (1) Descriptive studies establishing functional relationships between eating behaviors and social, cognitive, environmental, attitudinal, emotional or biochemical factors; (2) Clinical outcome research evaluating the efficacy of prevention or treatment protocols.
期刊最新文献
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