Disordered eating and emotional eating in Arab, middle eastern, and north African American women

Eat Behav. 2024 Mar 6;53:101868. doi: 10.1016/j.eatbeh.2024.101868. Online ahead of print.ABSTRACTArab, Middle Eastern, and North African (A-MENA) American women are often subject to intersectional discrimination, and they have also not been traditionally recognized as a distinct racial group in disordered eating literature. No study to date has provided descriptive information on disordered and emotional eating A-MENA American women, nor has examined perceptions of widely used measurements of eating pathology in this population. The current study generated descriptive information among A-MENA women on two widely used measures of eating pathology, the Eating Disorder Examination Questionnaire (EDE-Q) and the Emotional Eating Scale (EES). Participants (N = 244) were A-MENA adult women were recruited via social media and snowball sampling. Qualitative findings provide potential sociocultural predictors of disordered eating that should be further explored, such as bicultural identity and family pressures/comments toward appearance. Secondly, themes from the EES-R indicate adding emotion of shame and considering identity-related stress. The current study provides prevalence data and future directions of research on widely used eating pathology and appearance attitude measurements for A-MENA American women.PMID:38582007 | DOI:10.1016/j.eatbeh.2024.101868
Source: Eating Behaviors - Category: Eating Disorders & Weight Management Authors: Source Type: research