M. Liebman et al., Dietary fat reduction behaviors in college students: relationship to dieting status, gender and key psychosocial variables, APPETITE, 36(1), 2001, pp. 51-56
The primary objectives were to assess dietary fat reduction/avoidance behav
iors within a sample of college students, and to assess the strength of the
relationship between self reported fat avoidance and a number of variables
including body mass index (BMI), self-esteem, and responses to the Eating
Disorder Inventory (EDI) and Eating Attitudes Test (EAT). A total of 210 fe
male and 114 male undergraduate students were administered a food habits qu
estionnaire (which assessed four dietary fat reduction behaviors), the EDI,
the dieting subscale of the EAT, and the Coopersmith Self-Esteem Inventory
. Measured heights and weights were used to compute BMI. Thirty-eight perce
nt of the females and 13% of the males reported that they had dieted with t
he express purpose of losing weight in the past 12 months. The finding that
females in general and female dieters in particular, scored higher on the
EAT dieting subscale, and relied on three of the four dietary fat reduction
behaviors to a greater extent than did males, supports the assertion that
women rely heavily on dietary fat avoidance as a method to reduce caloric i
ntakes. In females, the finding that a greater degree of fat avoidance was
associated with significantly lower levels of self-esteem and higher scores
on the EAT and on six of the eight EDI subscales suggested that fat avoida
nce may be a predictor of eating pathology and/or psychosocial problems in
college-aged women. (C) 2001 Academic Press.