The purpose of the study was to examine the relationships between patterns
of behaviour, body composition and diet in adolescent girls. A group of 328
14 to 16-year-old girls at school in Southampton, U.K. completed a questio
nnaire about their behaviour and lifestyle, and had their heights, weights
and skinfold thicknesses measured. Of these girls, 286 also provided dietar
y information. Socially independent girls were more likely to smoke, and le
ss likely to eat breakfast and meals with family. They consumed more snacks
, chocolate and soft drinks. Girls who were dissatisfied with their weight
dieted and exercised, watched less television and spent less of their money
on food. Dissatisfaction with weight was strongly related to body mass ind
ex. The odds of being a dieter, an indication of dissatisfaction with weigh
t, increased with every unit increase in body mass index, so that girls wit
h a body mass index of 24 kg/m(2) and over were 19 times more likely to die
t than those with a body mass index of 19 kg/m2 or less. Girls who were les
s satisfied with their weight reported lower energy intakes but ate more gr
een vegetables and brown bread than other girls. The eating habits of the g
irls were therefore influenced by the extent of their social lives and by t
heir satisfaction with their weight. (C) 2000 Academic Press.