Repository logo
 

The role of psychosocial well-being and emotion-driven impulsiveness in food choices of European adolescents

Published version
Peer-reviewed

Repository DOI


Change log

Abstract

BACKGROUND: It is unclear whether a hypothetical intervention targeting either psychosocial well-being or emotion-driven impulsiveness is more effective in reducing unhealthy food choices. Therefore, we aimed to compare the (separate) causal effects of psychosocial well-being and emotion-driven impulsiveness on European adolescents' sweet and fat propensity. METHODS: We included 2,065 participants of the IDEFICS/I.Family cohort (mean age: 13.4) providing self-reported data on sweet propensity (score range: 0 to 68.4), fat propensity (range: 0 to 72.6), emotion-driven impulsiveness using the UPPS-P negative urgency subscale, and psychosocial well-being using the KINDLR Questionnaire. We estimated, separately, the average causal effects of psychosocial well-being and emotion-driven impulsiveness on sweet and fat propensity applying a semi-parametric doubly robust method (targeted maximum likelihood estimation). Further, we investigated a potential indirect effect of psychosocial well-being on sweet and fat propensity mediated via emotion-driven impulsiveness using a causal mediation analysis. RESULTS: If all adolescents, hypothetically, had high levels of psychosocial well-being, compared to low levels, we estimated a decrease in average sweet propensity by 1.43 [95%-confidence interval: 0.25 to 2.61]. A smaller effect was estimated for fat propensity. Similarly, if all adolescents had high levels of emotion-driven impulsiveness, compared to low levels, average sweet propensity would be decreased by 2.07 [0.87 to 3.26] and average fat propensity by 1.85 [0.81 to 2.88]. The indirect effect of psychosocial well-being via emotion-driven impulsiveness was 0.61 [0.24 to 1.09] for average sweet propensity and 0.55 [0.13 to 0.86] for average fat propensity. CONCLUSIONS: An intervention targeting emotion-driven impulsiveness, compared to psychosocial well-being, would be marginally more effective in reducing sweet and fat propensity in adolescents.

Description

Acknowledgements: We thank Maria Geers for her valuable support in the statistical analyses and Claudia Bruenings-Kuppe for her assistance with data management.


Funder: Leibniz-Institut für Präventionsforschung und Epidemiologie – BIPS GmbH (5712)

Journal Title

International Journal of Behavioral Nutrition and Physical Activity

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1479-5868
1479-5868

Volume Title

21

Publisher

BMC

Rights and licensing

Except where otherwised noted, this item's license is described as Attribution 4.0 International
Sponsorship
This work was done as part of the IDEFICS and I. Family studies. We gratefully acknowledge the financial support by the European Commission within the Sixth RTD Framework Programme Contract No.016181 (FOOD) and the Seventh RTD Framework Programme Contract No.266044, respectively. Open Access funding enabled and organized by Projekt DEAL.