Abstract

Perceived stress affects emotional eating and food choices. However, the extent to which stress associates with food choice motives is not completely understood. This study assessed whether emotional eating mediates the associations between perceived stress levels and food choice motives (i.e., health, mood, convenience, natural content, price, sensory appeal, familiarities, weight control, and ethical concerns) during the Coronavirus Disease 2019 pandemic. A total of 800 respondents were surveyed in the United States in June 2020. Their perceived stress, emotional eating, and food choice motives were assessed by the Perceived Stress Scale, Dutch Eating Behavior Questionnaire, and Food Choice Questionnaire, respectively. Moderate to high levels of perceived stress were experienced by the majority (73.6%) of respondents. Perceived stress was significantly correlated with emotional eating (r = 0.26) as well as five out of nine food choice motives: mood (r = 0.32), convenience (r = 0.28), natural content (r = −0.14), price (r = 0.27), and familiarity (r = 0.15). Emotional eating was significantly correlated with four out of nine food choice motives: mood (r = 0.27), convenience (r = 0.23), price (r = 0.16), and familiarity (r = 0.16). The mediation analyses showed that emotional eating mediates the associations between perceived stress and five food choices motives: mood, convenience, sensory appeal, price, and familiarity. Findings were interpreted using theories and concepts from the humanities, specifically, folklore studies, ritual studies, and symbolic anthropology.

Highlights

  • Stress, anxiety, and depression are emotions associated with undesirable eating behaviors [1]; heightened levels of these emotions have been reported worldwide during the Coronavirus Disease2019 (COVID-19) pandemic [2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12]

  • We examined whether associations between perceived stress and nine food choice motives were mediated by emotional eating by fitting a simple mediation model for each of the food choice motives

  • The perception of stress was positively associated with emotional eating, and the greater tendency toward emotional eating, the greater the desire to choose foods based on motives such as mood, convenience, sensory appeal, price, and familiarity

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Summary

Introduction

Anxiety, and depression are emotions associated with undesirable eating behaviors [1]; heightened levels of these emotions have been reported worldwide during the Coronavirus Disease. 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic [2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12]. In January 2020, one week after the initial COVID-19 outbreak in. China, a nationwide survey indicated that over 35% of Chinese people were experiencing peritraumatic distress related to COVID-19 [10]. The United States (US) faced its own COVID-19 outbreak and declared a state of emergency in March. In April, a nationwide survey of US adults reported that 13.6%. COVID-19-related mental health concerns such as depression, anxiety, and post-traumatic Had symptoms associated with serious psychological distress; three times higher than in 2018 [6].

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