Fig. 3: Behavioural and psychosocial factors associated with BMI trajectories. | International Journal of Obesity

Fig. 3: Behavioural and psychosocial factors associated with BMI trajectories.

From: Pathways linking BMI trajectories and mental health in an adult population-based cohort: role of emotional eating and body dissatisfaction

Fig. 3: Behavioural and psychosocial factors associated with BMI trajectories.

Models adjusted for age, sex, education, and physical health condition. Results are standardised betas A and ORs B with 95% confidence intervals. *p < 0.05, **p < 0.01, ***p < 0.001. Short sleep duration = < 7 h. Reference categories for categorical variables are as follows: No short sleep duration, no binge drinking, no anti-depressant medication use, and no financial hardship. Total N per model: physical activity (N = 5267), screen time (N = 4017), sleep duration (N = 7358), fruit and vegetable consumption (N = 4313), binge drinking (N = 4579), anti-depressant medication use (N = 7373), emotional eating (N = 4313), financial hardship (N = 7370), anxiety and depressive symptoms (N = 5657), loneliness (N = 7283), perceived stress (N = 5179), social support (N = 7233), self-esteem (N = 4313), self-efficacy (N = 4313), personal mastery (N = 5872).

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