Impact of Speed-Eating Habit on Subsequent Body Mass Index and Blood Pressure Among Schoolchildren - The Ibaraki Children's Cohort Study (IBACHIL)

Circ J. 2018 Jan 25;82(2):419-422. doi: 10.1253/circj.CJ-17-0287. Epub 2017 Sep 5.

Abstract

Background: Habitual speed eating is a risk factor of obesity but evidence of this in children is limited. We examined the association between speed-eating habit and subsequent body mass index (BMI) and blood pressure (BP) among Japanese children.Methods and Results:The community-based study comprised 1,490 Japanese boys and girls who were born in 1989, involved in the Ibaraki Children's Cohort Study at age 3 years, and had returned questionnaires at both ages 6 and 12 years. In a subsample, we measured BP (n=263). Speed-eating habit was categorized into 4 groups: Never, Quit, Newly, and Continuous. Sex-specific mean values of questionnaire-based BMI and measured BPs at age 12 were examined according to speed-eating habit. Children with continuous speed eating had a higher BMI at age 12 than those who had never had a speed-eating habit (20.0 vs. 17.9 kg/m2for boys (P<0.001); 20.0 vs. 18.4 kg/m2(P<0.001) for girls). Systolic BP at age 12 was higher in boys with continuous speed eating than in those without (117 vs. 110 mmHg, P=0.01), but such a difference was not observed in girls (112 vs. 111 mmHg, P=0.95).

Conclusions: Habitualspeed eating was positively associated with subsequent BMI among boys and girls as well as with systolic BP among boys.

Keywords: Eating habits; Epidemiology; Hypertension; Obesity; Prospective studies.

MeSH terms

  • Blood Pressure*
  • Body Mass Index*
  • Child
  • Child, Preschool
  • Feeding Behavior / physiology*
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Obesity / etiology
  • Sex Factors