Parental Support and Adolescent Motivation for Dieting

Author
Katz, I.
Lecturer

This article focuses on parents’ role in overweight adolescents’ motivation to diet and successful weight loss. The study employed Self-Determination Theory (SDT) as the theoretical framework (Deci & Ryan, 2000, 2011). Ninety-nine participants (ages 20–30) who had been overweight during adolescence according to their Body Mass Index (BMI mean = 25, SD = 1.6), completed retrospective questionnaires about their motivation to diet and their parents’ behavior in the context of dieting. Findings from a structural equation modeling analysis suggested that participants who viewed their parents’ as more need-supportive demonstrated more autonomous motivation to diet, which, in turn, contributed to their successful weight loss. The findings highlight the importance of parental support of adolescents’ psychological needs in the quality of their motivation to diet. This is an important insight for parents and professionals who aim to encourage more constructive parent involvement in adolescents’ dieting and well-being.

Katz, I., Madjar, N., & Harari, A. (2014)

Parental Support and Adolescent Motivation for Dieting: The Self-Determination Theory. The Journal of Psychology, DOI: 10.1080/00223980.2014.903890

Last Updated Date : 16/12/2014