Columbus [Ohio, US]: According to new research, coaching overweight or obese pregnant women to improve their ability to plan and achieve goals may be critical to helping them reduce the amount of fat in their diet. Previous research has shown that maternal diet quality affects prenatal development and long-term child health outcomes, but the stress that typically increases during pregnancy - often exacerbated by concern for foetal health and anxiety over impending parenthood - may derail efforts to focus on healthful eating.
In this new study, researchers at The Ohio State University set out to identify the pathway between stress and total fat consumption, with a broader goal to evaluate an intervention designed to improve the diets of pregnant women who are overweight or obese. Through a series of questionnaires and statistical analysis, the team found that two thinking-related skills - planning, and execution of those plans - were weakened in women whose stress was high, and those skill gaps were associated with higher total fat intake.
These two skills are known as executive functions, a set of multiple thinking processes that enable people to plan, monitor behavior and execute their goals. "People with a higher level of stress tend to have a higher intake of fat, too. If stress is high, we're so stressed out that we're not thinking about anything - and we don't care what we eat," said lead author Mei-Wei Chang, associate professor of nursing at Ohio State.
"That's why we focused on executive functions as a mediator between stress and diet. And with this baseline data, we have reasons to believe that designing an intervention around executive functions could improve dietary outcomes," she said. "I would anticipate the results could be similar for nonpregnant women, because it's all about how people behave." The study was published recently in the Journal of Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health.
The 70 women enrolled in the study had a pre-pregnancy body mass index of between 25 (scores between 25 and 29.9 are categorized as overweight) and 45 (scores of 30 and higher are categorized as obese). The participants completed questionnaires assessing both overall perceived stress and pregnancy-related stress, as well as executive functions - specifically focusing on metacognition, or the ability to plan, and behavior regulation, the ability to execute those plans. They also completed two 24-hour dietary recalls of their calorie intake and consumption of total fat, added sugar, and fruits and vegetables.
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