Eating behaviours, dietary profile and body composition according to dieting history in men and women of the Québec Family Study — Véronique Provencher (2004) | RDL Network
Eating behaviours, dietary profile and body composition according to dieting history in men and women of the Québec Family Study
British Journal Of Nutrition 91(6): 997-1004
Article 2004 English
Authors
VP
Véronique Provencher
VD
Vicky Drapeau
AT
Angelo Tremblay
Abstract
1 min read
The purpose of the present cross-sectional study was to compare eating behaviours (cognitive dietary restraint, disinhibition and susceptibility to hunger), dietary profile and physiological variables according to the practice of dieting: current dieting; history of dieting in the 10-year period that preceded the study; no dieting during the same period. Dieting history, anthropometric markers of adiposity, RMR, dietary profile (3 d food record) and eating behaviours (three-factor eating questionnaire) were determined in a sample of 244 men and 352 women. A greater proportion of women (31·8 %) than men (16·8 %) reported that they had been on a diet over the past 10 years ( P =0·0001). In both genders, current and past dieters had a higher BMI ( P <0·05) than non-dieters and current dieters had lower reported energy intakes than past dieters and non-dieters (only in women) ( P <0·05). Current and past dieters also had higher scores for all eating behaviours and their subscales ( P <0·05; except for susceptibility to hunger in men) compared with non-dieters (adjusted for age, reported energy intake, percentage of dietary fat, BMI and RMR). Moreover, for each dieting-history category, women had significantly higher scores for cognitive dietary restraint than men ( P <0·05). In conclusion, the present study showed that current and past dieters had higher scores for cognitive dietary restraint and disinhibition compared with non-dieters. As disinhibition has previously been associated with a greater risk of subsequent weight gain, interventions aimed at preventing an increase in disinhibition may be promising for long-term weight maintenance.
Véronique Provencher, Louis Pérusse, Luigi Bouchard, Vicky Drapeau, Claude Bouchard, Treva Rice, D. C. Rao, Angelo Tremblay, Jean‐Pierre Després, Simone Lemieux
Kelly Virecoulon Giudici, Julia Baudry, Caroline Méjean, Denis Lairon, Marc Bénard, Serge Hercberg, France Bellisle, Emmanuelle Kesse‐Guyot, Sandrine Péneau
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