Abstract

Positive urgency reflects a specific facet of impulsivity and correlates with several health-related risk behaviors such as obesity, food addiction, and substance use. However, less is known about whether positive urgency is similarly or differently associated with high body mass index (BMI) across diverse racial groups. The aim of this study was to investigate racial differences in the associations between positive urgency and BMI in 9-10-year-old children in the US. This cross-sectional study used the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) study data. Participants were 11590 American children between ages 9 and 10 years old. The independent variable was positive urgency measured by the Urgency, Premeditation (lack of), Perseverance (lack of), Sensation Seeking, Positive Urgency, Impulsive Behavior Scale (UPPS-SS). The primary outcome was BMI. Race was the moderator. Demographic variables (age and sex) were covariates. Mixed-effects regression models were used for data analysis to adjust for the nested nature of the ABCD data. We also used weights (propensity score) to generate nationally representative results. In the pooled sample, race showed a statistically significant interaction with positive urgency on children's BMI, indicating a stronger effect of positive urgency on BMI for White children, compared to African American children. The association between positive urgency and BMI seems to be weaker in African American children than in White American children. The role of individual-level risk factors such as impulsive traits may be smaller for African American than White American children. Future research should study the role of obesogenic environments and other area -level indicators in altering the effects of individual-level risk factors on BMI and obesity.

Highlights

  • Positive urgency reflects a specific facet of impulsivity and correlates with several health-related risk behaviors such as obesity, food addiction, and substance use

  • Our findings showed a stronger link between higher positive urgency and body mass index (BMI) in White than African American adolescents

  • Positive urgency may be a less salient psychological determinant of BMI for African American children, compared to White children

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Summary

Introduction

Positive urgency reflects a specific facet of impulsivity and correlates with several health-related risk behaviors such as obesity, food addiction, and substance use. Results: In the pooled sample, race showed a statistically significant interaction with positive urgency on children’s BMI, indicating a stronger effect of positive urgency on BMI for White children, compared to African American children. Race had a significant interaction with suicidal behaviors on children’s positive urgency, indicating a weaker link between suicidality and positive urgency for African American and Other/Mixed race children than White children. In high-risk environments, this link is not observed for African American children (Assari, 2020c) It is still unknown if the link between positive urgency and BMI depends on race or not (Bardo et al, 2018)

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