AI Article Synopsis

  • The study explored how race and gender differences affect positive psychological traits and health behaviors like eating and exercising among college students.
  • It used online surveys with a sample of 1,228 students to look into connections between body appreciation, well-being, and intuitive health practices.
  • Results indicated that while increased body appreciation generally leads to better well-being and healthier eating/exercising habits, this pattern varied notably across racial identities and specific health behaviors.

Article Abstract

Purpose: The present study examined race and gender differences among positive psychological constructs, and adaptive eating and exercise behaviors.

Design: Cross-sectional.

Setting: Online.

Sample: College students ( = 1,228; Mage = 22.27, SD = 5.83).

Measures: Participants completed measures assessing positive body image, eudaimonic psychological well-being, and health behaviors.

Analyses: Multi-group structural equation modeling was used to examine whether White versus Black race and, separately, woman versus man gender identity moderated associations among body appreciation, eudaimonic psychological well-being, and intuitive eating and intuitive exercising.

Results: Results generally indicated that greater body appreciation was associated with greater eudaimonic psychological well-being (βs = 0.48, 0.56) and, in turn, intuitive eating (βs = -0.20, 0.25) and intuitive exercising (βs = -0.06, 0.23). However, notable variations in this pattern of results were identified based on the facet of intuitive eating and exercising under investigation, and participants' racial identities. For example, greater eudaimonic psychological well-being strictly mediated a positive association between body appreciation and reliance on hunger and satiety cues intuitive eating behaviors among participants who identified as Black (95%CI: 0.01, 0.12), but not White (95%CI: -0.08, 0.04).

Conclusions: Although the present findings warrant replication using longitudinal designs due to the cross-sectional nature of the present study, these findings suggest that increasing adults' eudaimonic psychological well-being may help improve health-promoting eating and exercise behaviors, and should be assessed as a mechanism of change in future clinical research.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/08901171211036910DOI Listing

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