Adverse childhood events are associated with obesity and disordered eating: Results from a U.S. population-based survey of young adults

Citation

Fuemmeler, B. F.; Dedert, E.; McClernon, F. J.; & Beckham, J. (2009). Adverse childhood events are associated with obesity and disordered eating: Results from a U.S. population-based survey of young adults. Behavior Genetics. vol. 22 (4) pp. 329-333 , PMCID: PMC2748336

Abstract

The authors investigated the relationship between childhood abuse and obesity in young adulthood (M age = 22) in a large, U.S. representative sample (N = 15,197). Controlling for demographics and depression, men with a history of childhood sexual abuse were at increased risk of overweight and obesity. No association between childhood abuse and obesity or overweight was observed for women in this sample. Higher percentages of skipping meals to lose weight and problematic eating were observed among women with a history of physical abuse. This is the first study to note an association between childhood abuse with obesity and problematic weight management behaviors in a sample of young adults.

URL

http://dx.doi.org/10.1002%2Fjts.20421

Keyword(s)

Genetic Obesity Eating disorder

Reference Type

Journal Article

Journal Title

Behavior Genetics

Author(s)

Fuemmeler, B. F.
Dedert, E.
McClernon, F. J.
Beckham, J.

Year Published

2009

Volume Number

22

Issue Number

4

Pages

329-333

DOI

10.1002/jts.20421

PMCID

PMC2748336

Reference ID

999