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Friendship may control kids’ eating

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    “Our findings underscore the importance of considering the child’s social network in studying youth’s motivation to eat.”

    Sarah-Jeanne Salvy
    Assistant Professor of Pediatrics
By LOIS BAKER
Published: January 18, 2010

Parents are acutely aware of the influence of friends on their children’s behavior—how they dress, how they wear their hair, whether they drink or smoke.

A new laboratory-based study has shown that friends also may influence how much adolescents eat.

“Consider a person who usually comes home alone after school and eats out of boredom,” says Sarah-Jeanne Salvy, assistant professor of pediatrics in UB’s Division of Behavioral Medicine and first author on the study.

“But on this day, she has a play date with a friend and socializes instead of eating. In this case, socializing is acting as a substitute for eating. Identifying substitutes provides a potential way to reduce behavior.

“Our findings underscore the importance of considering the child’s social network in studying youth’s motivation to eat,” says Salvy, a member of the Department of Pediatrics in the School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences.

“Previous attempts to find substitutes for food and eating have not been very successful. To our knowledge, no research has studied whether social interactions can be a substitute for food in children.”

The study appears online in the current issue of Annals of Behavioral Medicine.

The study involved 54 overweight and non-overweight youth—24 boys and 30 girls—between the ages of 9 and 11. Each was assigned randomly to bring a friend or to be paired with an unfamiliar peer.

Study participants worked on a computer game to earn points exchangeable for food or time to spend with their friend or with an unfamiliar peer.

“The task got increasingly harder and the food and social points became more difficult to earn as a way to measure how hard youth were willing to work for food or for play time with their friend or with an unfamiliar peer,” Salvy notes.

In the study, participants matched with an unfamiliar peer showed that when working for food became difficult, they switched to earn time with the unfamiliar peer, and when working for peer activity became harder, they switched to earn food.

However, participants assigned to the friend condition continued to work for time with their friends instead of working for food.

“Peer rejection and ostracism are obvious costs imposed on social interactions,” says Salvy. “Even the unavailability of one’s peers or friends can limit youth's access to social settings and situations. As a result, children may choose to engage in eating and sedentary activities when social alternatives are unavailable.

“There is emerging evidence that a youth's social network may be uniquely relevant and influential to eating behavior and choice of activities,” she continues. “Individuals are influenced by the eating and activity norms set by those around them, and the results of the present study suggest that friendship can provide an alternative to eating.

“These findings, and the work of others, imply that decreasing sedentary behavior and increasing active leisure activities may require meaningful relationships with friends, as friendship may help to promote or ‘socialize’ active lifestyles.”

Lauren A. Nitecki, senior research support specialist in the Department of Pediatrics, and Leonard H. Epstein, professor of pediatrics and social and preventive medicine, contributed to the study.

The research was supported by a grant to Salvy from the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development.

Reader Comments

Iris Costner says:

I would agree with the work above. However I am curious if there is research being done on the diagnosis of obesity in teens in addition to lifestyle corrections. Once adaptations are made, how does one clearly determine if there isn’t a metabolic malfunction? There seems to be a concession that obesity is an epidemic and we should all be more active. When intervention has been indicated for a youth without tangible changes in weight; there has to be a way of determining if something else is going on. If you know of any such work please contact me at the following address: icostner@buffalo.edu I know of a population that may be interested in participating or taking advantage of such findings.

Posted by Iris Costner, Student, 01/25/10