Association between food habits with mental health and executive function in chilean children and adolescents
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Caamaño Navarrete, Felipe; Del-Cuerpo, Indya; Arriagada Hernández, Carlos; Cresp Barria, Mauricio; Hernández Mosqueira, Claudio; Contreras Díaz, Guido; Valdés-Badilla, Pablo; Jerez Mayorga, Daniel Alejandro; Delgado-Floody, PedroEditorial
MDPI
Materia
children foods habits depression
Fecha
2025-02-22Referencia bibliográfica
Caamaño-Navarrete, F.; del-Cuerpo, I.; Arriagada-Hernández, C.; Cresp-Barria, M.; Hernández- Mosqueira, C.; Contreras-Díaz, G.; Valdés-Badilla, P.; Jerez-Mayorga, D.; Delgado-Floody, P. Association Between Food Habits with Mental Health and Executive Function in Chilean Children and Adolescents. Children 2025, 12, 268. https:// doi.org/10.3390/children12030268
Resumen
Objective: To determine the association between foods habits with mental health
(i.e., anxiety, depression, and stress) and executive function (i.e., attention, inhibition, working
memory, and cognitive flexibility) in Chilean children and adolescents. Methods: A
cross-sectional study with 498 children and adolescents (52.6% female) aged 10–17 years
participated. The Krece Plus questionnaire (Food habits), Depression Anxiety Stress Scales
(DASS-21, metal health), and the CogniFit (executive functions) test were used to assess the
study variables. Results: The poor and moderate food habits groups reported higher prevalence
of extremely severe anxiety (poor, 40.8%; moderate, 41.4%; good, 21.6%; p = 0.013)
and extremely severe depression (poor, 20.4%; moderate, 21.3%; good, 5.7%; p < 0.001). The
food habits were linked inversely to anxiety (β −0.07, 95%CI −0.11 to −0.03, p = 0.001),
depression (β −0.08, 95%CI −0.12 to −0.04, p < 0.001), stress (β −0.07, 95%CI −0.11 to
−0.02, p = 0.004), and total score of negative mental health (β −0.03, 95%CI −0.04 to −0.01,
p < 0.001). Conclusions: The food habits were inversely associated with negative metal
health in Chilean children and adolescents, where the good food habits group reported
better mental health in all dimensions.