Calizaya-Milla Yaquelin E, Puente De La Vega-Fernández Ingrid, Javier-Aliaga David, Rodríguez-Vásquez Mery, Casas-Gálvez Christian, Valle-Chafloque Ana, Saintila Jacksaint
School of Human Nutrition, Faculty of Health Sciences, Universidad Peruana Unión, Lima 15472, Peru.
Research Group for Nutrition and Healthy Behaviors, Universidad Señor de Sipán, Chiclayo 14000, Peru.
Nutrients. 2025 Aug 18;17(16):2662. doi: 10.3390/nu17162662.
Emotional eating, defined as the tendency to eat in response to emotions, has been associated with various biopsychosocial factors. However, in the Peruvian context, there is limited evidence regarding the specific predictors of this eating behavior in adolescents. To examine the associations between saturated fat intake, sleep duration, body mass index (BMI), depressive symptoms, age and sex, and emotional eating in Peruvian adolescents. This was a predictive cross-sectional study based on non-probabilistic sampling. A total of 722 adolescents from four schools located in East Lima were included. A multiple linear regression model was employed to examine the relationships between age, sex, saturated fat intake (SFI), sleep duration, BMI, and depressive symptoms and emotional eating. The model was statistically significant (adjusted R = 0.301; F = 45.276; < 0.001), explaining 30.1% of the variance in emotional eating based on the explanatory variables. Being female (β = 0.208; = 0.011), aged 15 to 18 versus 12 to 14 years (β = 0.083; < 0.001), having a high SFI (β = 0.186; < 0.001), sleeping ≥ 7 h (β = -0.126; < 0.001), and a higher BMI (β = -0.082; = 0.011) were significantly associated with emotional eating. Depressive symptoms (β = 0.365; < 0.001) emerged as the strongest predictor in the model. Emotional eating among Peruvian adolescents is associated with psychological, behavioral, and sociodemographic factors. Depressive symptoms showed the strongest association, while longer sleep duration was linked to lower emotional eating scores. These findings highlight the need for integrated interventions targeting mental health, sleep hygiene, and healthy dietary behaviors in adolescents.
情绪性进食被定义为因情绪而进食的倾向,它与多种生物心理社会因素相关。然而,在秘鲁的背景下,关于青少年这种饮食行为的具体预测因素的证据有限。本研究旨在探讨秘鲁青少年饱和脂肪摄入量、睡眠时间、体重指数(BMI)、抑郁症状、年龄和性别与情绪性进食之间的关联。这是一项基于非概率抽样的预测性横断面研究。研究纳入了来自利马东部四所学校的722名青少年。采用多元线性回归模型来检验年龄、性别、饱和脂肪摄入量(SFI)、睡眠时间、BMI和抑郁症状与情绪性进食之间的关系。该模型具有统计学意义(调整后R = 0.301;F = 45.276;P < 0.001),基于解释变量解释了情绪性进食中30.1%的方差。女性(β = 0.208;P = 0.011)、年龄在15至18岁而非12至14岁(β = 0.083;P < 0.001)、高SFI(β = 0.186;P < 0.001)、睡眠时间≥7小时(β = -0.126;P < 0.001)以及较高的BMI(β = -0.082;P = 0.011)与情绪性进食显著相关。抑郁症状(β = 0.365;P < 0.001)是模型中最强的预测因素。秘鲁青少年的情绪性进食与心理、行为和社会人口学因素相关。抑郁症状显示出最强的关联,而较长的睡眠时间与较低的情绪性进食得分相关。这些发现凸显了针对青少年心理健康、睡眠卫生和健康饮食行为进行综合干预的必要性。