Byrne, Meghan E., Burke, Natasha L., Neyland, M.K. Higgins, Bloomer, Bess F., Hayes, Hannah E., Loch, Lucy K., Te-Vazquez, Jennifer, Nwosu, Ejike E., Lazareva, Julia, Moursi, Nasreen A., Schvey, Natasha A., Shomaker, Lauren B., Brady, Sheila M., Sbrocco, Tracy, and Tanofsky-Kraff, Marian
Negative affect and loss-of-control (LOC)-eating are consistently linked and prevalent among youth identifying as non-Hispanic Black (NHB) and non-Hispanic White (NHW), particularly those with high weight. Given health disparities in high weight and associated cardiometabolic health concerns among NHB youth, elucidating how the association of negative affect with adiposity may vary by racial/ethnic group, and whether that relationship is impacted by LOC-eating, is warranted. Social inequities and related stressors are associated with negative affect among NHB youth, which may place this group at increased risk for excess weight gain. Across multiple aggregated protocols, 651 youth (13.0 ± 2.7 y; 65.9 % girls, 40.7 % NHB; 1.0 ± 1.1 BMI z ; 37.6 % LOC-eating) self-reported trait anxiety and depressive symptoms as facets of negative affect. LOC-eating was assessed by interview and adiposity was measured objectively. Cross-sectional moderated mediation models predicted adiposity from ethno-racial identification (NHB, NHW) through the pathway of anxiety or depressive symptoms and examined whether LOC-eating influenced the strength of the pathway, adjusting for SES, age, height, and sex. The association between ethno-racial identity and adiposity was partially mediated by both anxiety (95 % CI = [0.01, 0.05]) and depressive symptoms (95 % CI = [0.02, 0.08]), but the mediation was not moderated by LOC-eating for either anxiety (95 % CI = [−0.04, 0.003]) or depressive symptoms (95 % CI = [−0.07, 0.03]). Mechanisms underlying the link between negative affect and adiposity among NHB youth, such as stress from discrimination and stress-related inflammation, should be explored. These data highlight the need to study impacts of social inequities on psychosocial and health outcomes. • Trait anxiety and depressive symptoms partially explain higher adiposity among youth identifying as Non-Hispanic Black compared to Non-Hispanic White • Loss-of-control eating did not moderate the mediation pathway • Anxiety and depressive symptoms may partially explain a pathway for increased risk for internalizing pathology and adverse health outcomes for youth identifying as Non-Hispanic Black [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]