Emotion Regulation Moderates the Associations of Food Parenting and Adolescent Emotional Eating

J Nutr Educ Behav. 2022 Sep;54(9):808-817. doi: 10.1016/j.jneb.2022.05.002.

Abstract

Objective: To explore parental feeding practices and eating behavior as predictors of the child's emotional eating (EE) and child's emotion regulation (ER) as a potential moderator.

Design: Parental eating behavior (emotional, external, and restrained eating), 9 parental feeding practices (restriction, food as reward, food as ER, monitoring, healthy modeling, healthy environment, child control, and child involvement), ER, and EE were analyzed cross-sectionally and 5 parental practices longitudinally (subsample, n = 115).

Setting: Belgium.

Participants: Two hundred eighteen adolescents (aged 13.7 ± 1.77 years) and parent dyads.

Main outcome measures: Child's EE.

Analysis: Linear regression and moderation (cross-sectional) and linear mixed models (longitudinal). Models adjusted for multiple testing with a false discovery rate of 10% (Benjamini-Hochberg), age, sex, body mass index, socioeconomic status, and cohort.

Results: Cross-sectionally but not longitudinally, there was a positive association between predictors restriction and monitoring with the outcome child's EE (β = 0.19, P = 0.006; β = 0.17, P = 0.01, respectively). Restrained eating of the parent was negatively associated with the child's EE (β = -0.22, P = 0.003). The child's maladaptive ER significantly moderated the associations of 5 feeding practices and parental EE with the child's EE.

Conclusions and implications: Parents continue to play a role in the eating behavior of their adolescent offspring, not only through their feeding practices (restrictive parenting was most detrimental) but also by displaying restrained eating (beneficial). A child's ER appears as an important moderator of the established associations; however, more research is needed to better understand these observations.

Keywords: adolescence; emotion regulation; emotional eating; feeding practices; parental eating behavior.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Adolescent
  • Child
  • Child Behavior / psychology
  • Cross-Sectional Studies
  • Emotional Regulation*
  • Humans
  • Parent-Child Relations
  • Parenting* / psychology
  • Surveys and Questionnaires