Title of article :
Children’s coping after psychological stress. Choices among food, physical activity, and television
Author/Authors :
Katherine N. Balantekin، نويسنده , , James N. Roemmich، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2012
Pages :
7
From page :
298
To page :
304
Abstract :
Children’s stress-coping behaviors and their determinants have not been widely studied. Some children eat more after stress and dietary restraint moderates stress eating in youth, but eating has been studied in isolation of other coping behaviors. Children may not choose to eat when stressed if other behavioral alternatives are available. The purpose was to determine individual difference factors that moderate the duration of stress coping choices and to determine if stress-induced eating in youth persists when other stress coping behaviors are available. Thirty children (8–12 years) completed a speech stressor on one day and read magazines on another day. They completed a free-choice period with access to food, TV, and physical activity on both days. Dietary restraint moderated changes in time spent eating and energy consumed from the control to stress day. Children high in restraint increased their energy intake on the stress day. Changes in the time spent watching TV were moderated by usual TV time, as children higher in usual TV increased their TV time after stress. Thus, dietary restrained children eat more when stressed when other common stress coping behaviors are freely available. These results extend the external validity of laboratory studies of stress-induced eating.
Keywords :
Behavioral choice , coping , Eating behavior , Dietary restraint , Psychological stress
Journal title :
Appetite
Serial Year :
2012
Journal title :
Appetite
Record number :
956795
Link To Document :
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