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Evaluation of the Effect of Hedonic Hunger on Nutrition Change Processes and Its Relationship with BMI: A Study on University Students

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TLDR
In this article , the effect of hedonic hunger on nutritional change processes and its relationship with BMI in university students was evaluated, and the results showed that overweight students have higher food available, food present and food taste subfactors of PFS than normal weight students.
Abstract
Objective: The aim of this study is to evaluate the effect of hedonic hunger on nutritional change processes and its relationship with BMI in university students. Methods: A questionnaire consisting of sociodemographic characteristics, questions about eating habits, Power of Food Scale (PFS) and Nutrition Change Processes Scale (NPCS) were applied to 1003 undergraduate students. Results: Majority of the students were female and normal weight in terms of BMI. The median PFS and score of the obese students is higher than the normal ones. The median NPCS scores of obese students are higher than other BMI classifications (p< .01). The median scores of food available, food present and food taste sub-factors of PFS are statistically higher in obese students than in normal-weight students (p< .01). The sub-factors of NPCS that consciousness raising, dramatic relief, self-reevaluation, social liberation, contingency management, self-liberation, stimulus control median scores are statistically higher in obese students than in normal-weight students. As hedonic hunger increases, the nutritional change process increases by 13.7%. The increase in hedonic hunger affects the nutritional change processes positively by 46.1% (p< .001). Conclusion: Hedonic hunger and nutrition change processes of obese students are higher than those of normal weight, and as hedonic hunger increases, the process of nutritional change increases, and the increase in hedonic hunger positively affects nutritional change processes.

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Journal ArticleDOI

The Transtheoretical Model of Health Behavior Change

TL;DR: If results with stage-matched interventions continue to be replicated, health promotion programs will be able to produce unprecedented impacts on entire at-risk populations.
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Hedonic hunger: a new dimension of appetite?

TL;DR: Evidence suggesting that the appetitive anomalies associated with restrained eating are due to diet-induced challenges to the homeostatic system more likely stem from hedonic hunger is reviewed, and a recently-developed measure of individual differences in appetitive responsiveness to rewarding properties of the food environment is described.
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Obesogenic environments: a systematic review of the association between the physical environment and adult weight status, the SPOTLIGHT project

TL;DR: With the exception of urban sprawl and land use mix in the US the results of the current review confirm that the available research does not allow robust identification of ways in which that physical environment influences adult weight status, even after taking into account methodological quality.
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Eating habits of University students living at, or away from home in Greece

TL;DR: It is suggested that moving away from the family home and assuming responsibility for food preparation and purchasing for the first time affect dietary habits in this sample of Greek University students.