The relationship between anxiety, coping, and disordered-eating attitudes in adolescent military-dependents at high-risk for excess weight gain

Senait Solomon, Lisa M. Shank*, Jason M. Lavender, M. K. Higgins Neyland, Julia Gallager-Teske, Bethelhem Markos, Hannah Haynes, Hannah Repke, Alexander J. Rice, Tracy Sbrocco, Denise E. Wilfley, Natasha A. Schvey, Sarah Jorgensen, Brian Ford, Caitlin B. Ford, Mark Haigney, David A. Klein, Jeffrey Quinlan, Marian Tanofsky‐Kraff

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Scopus citations

Abstract

Adolescent military-dependents are an understudied population who face unique stressors due to their parents’ careers. Research suggests tat adolescent military-dependents report more anxiety and disordered-eating than their civilian counterparts. While anxiety symptoms predict the onset and worsening of disordered-eating attitudes, the mechanisms underlying this relationship remain unclear. One factor that may underlie this relationship, and be particularly relevant for military-dependent youth, is coping. Therefore, we examined adolescent military-dependents (N = 136; 14.5 ± 1.5 years; 59.6% female; BMI-z: 1.9 ± 0.4) who were at-risk for adult obesity and binge-eating disorder due to an age- and sex-adjusted BMI ≥ 85th percentile and loss-of-control eating and/or elevated anxiety. Participants completed an interview assessing disordered-eating attitudes and questionnaires on anxiety symptoms and coping strategies at a single time point. Bootstrapping models were conducted to examine the indirect paths between anxiety symptoms and disordered-eating attitudes through five coping subscales (aggression, distraction, endurance, self-distraction, and stress-recognition). Adjusting for relevant covariates, no significant indirect paths through the coping subscales (ps >.05) were found in any models. General coping, nonspecific to eating, may not be a pathway between anxiety symptoms and disordered-eating attitudes among adolescents. Future research should examine other potential mediators of this relationship.Abbreviations: BMI-z, BMI standard deviation score, adjusted for age and sex; LECI-C, Life Events and Coping Inventory–Coping.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)95-106
Number of pages12
JournalMilitary Psychology
Volume35
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - 2023
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Adolescent military-dependents
  • anxiety
  • coping
  • disordered-eating attitudes
  • overweight/obesity

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