David Baxter PhD
Late Founder
Girls benefit from family meals
November 10, 2004
MINNESOTA, Minn., (United Press International) -- Minnesota researchers say the frequency and quality of family meals have a great deal to do with preventing eating disorders in girls.
A University of Minnesota team has found the importance, structure, and atmosphere of family meals may help steer adolescent girls from eating disorders.
Girls who ate regular family meals in a structured and positive environment were less likely to exhibit extreme weight control behaviors, such as diet pill use, vomiting and chronic dieting.
The meal itself provides an opportunity to model healthy eating habits to children, and it also gives parents the chance to talk with their children, said study author Dianne Neumark-Sztainer, an epidemiologist.
She found that:
November 10, 2004
MINNESOTA, Minn., (United Press International) -- Minnesota researchers say the frequency and quality of family meals have a great deal to do with preventing eating disorders in girls.
A University of Minnesota team has found the importance, structure, and atmosphere of family meals may help steer adolescent girls from eating disorders.
Girls who ate regular family meals in a structured and positive environment were less likely to exhibit extreme weight control behaviors, such as diet pill use, vomiting and chronic dieting.
The meal itself provides an opportunity to model healthy eating habits to children, and it also gives parents the chance to talk with their children, said study author Dianne Neumark-Sztainer, an epidemiologist.
She found that:
- Girls who ate three to four family meals per week were at about one-third the risk for extreme weight control practices;
- Girls who ate five family meals per week were at about one-fourth the risk for extreme weight control practices; and
- Boys also benefit from family meals, but the association was not as strong as it is for girls. [/list:u] The study is summarized in this month's issue of the Journal of Adolescent Health.