Eating Disorders
A predictive model of eating behaviors, eating styles and body mass index during COVID-19 lockdown in a young sample
Tamara Escrivá-Martínez, Ph.D.
Personnel in investigation
Faculty of Psychology, University of Valencia
Alzira, Comunidad Valenciana, Spain
Marta Miragall, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor
University of Valencia
Valencia, Comunidad Valenciana, Spain
Rocío Herrero, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor
University of Zaragoza
Valencia, Comunidad Valenciana, Spain
Marta Rodriguez-Arias, Ph.D.
Full professor
Universidad de Valencia
Valencia, Comunidad Valenciana, Spain
Rosa M. baños, Ph.D.
Professor
university of valencia
valencia, Comunidad Valenciana, Spain
COVID-19 confinement affected lifestyles. There is inconclusive evidence about changes in eating patterns, and there are few studies on the impact on body mass index (BMI), the occurrence of dysfunctional behaviors (binge eating, fat intake), and the predictive role of maladaptive eating styles (emotional, external, and restrained eating). The objectives were: 1) to analyze the differences in binge eating, fat intake, BMI, and maladaptive eating styles before and during COVID-19 confinement, and 2) to analyze whether maladaptive eating styles (before confinement) predicted binge eating, fat intake, and BMI during confinement. One hundred forty-six Spanish college students (71.2% female; Mage=22.93, SDage=3.33) completed several dietary measures and BMI twice: before COVID-19 confinement (T1, November 2019) and during COVID-19 confinement (T2, April 2020). BMI and maladaptive eating styles did not change in T2 (vs T1). However, binge eating and fat intake decreased in T2. Emotional eating at T1 positively predicted BMI and binge eating at T2. External eating at T1 positively (and marginally) predicted fat intake at T2. Restrained eating at T1 positively predicted binge eating at T2, and negatively (and marginally) predicted BMI and fat intake at T2. The model explained 80.5% of the variance in BMI, 41.5% of the variance in binge eating, and 25.8% of the variance in fat intake during COVID-19 confinement. The COVID-19 confinement had a positive impact on some eating behaviors. Future policies should focus part of their prevention on maladaptive eating styles to curb dysfunctional eating behaviors and BMI problems in times of stress.