1. The association between emotional eating and depressive symptoms:a population based twin study in Sri Lanka
- Author
-
Herle, Moritz P., Kan, Carol, Jayaweera, Kaushalya, Adikari, Anushka, Siribaddana, Sisira, Zavos, Helena M.S., Smolkina, Milana, Sumathipala, Athula, Llewellyn, Clare, Ismail, Khalida, Hotopf, Matthew, Treasure, Janet, and Rijsdijk, Frühling
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Epidemiology ,Depression ,emotional eating ,Emotions ,global health ,Feeding Behavior ,Twins, Monozygotic ,Hyperphagia ,Middle Aged ,Social Environment ,R1 ,non-western population ,Socioeconomic Factors ,Diseases in Twins ,Twins, Dizygotic ,Humans ,Female ,Original Research Article ,twin research ,RA ,Follow-Up Studies ,Sri Lanka - Abstract
This study investigated the genetic and environmental contributions to emotional overeating (EOE) and depressive symptoms, and their covariation, in a Sri-Lankan population, using genetic model-fitting analysis. In total, 3957 twins and singletons in the Colombo Twin and Singleton Study-Phase 2 rated their EOE behaviour and depressive symptoms, which were significantly associated (men: r = 0.11, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.06–0.16, women: r = 0.12, 95% CI 0.07–0.16). Non-shared environmental factors explained the majority of variance in men (EOE e2 = 87%, 95% CI 78–95%; depressive symptoms e2 = 72%, 95% CI 61–83%) and women (EOE e2 = 76%, 95% CI 68–83%; depressive symptoms e2 = 64%, 95% CI 55–74%). Genetic factors were more important for EOE in women (h2 = 21%, 95% CI 4–32%) than men (h2 = 9%, 95% CI 0–20%). Shared-environmental factors were more important for depressive symptoms in men (c2 = 25%, 95% CI 10–36%) than women (c2 = 9%, 95% CI 0–35%). Non-shared environmental factors explained the overlap between depressive symptoms and EOE in women but not in men. Results differed from high-income populations, highlighting the need for behavioural genetic research in global populations.
- Published
- 2019