Alman Yeme Davranışı Ölçeği'nin Geçerlik ve Güvenirlik Çalışması

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Date
2025Author
Türk, Öykü Peren
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In evaluating the relationship between
nutrition and behavior, eating behavior is addressed through its various dimensions. The
use of various psychometric measurement tools has become widespread. This two-phase
study aims to develop the Turkish version of the German Eating Behavior Scale (SEV-Tr),
and to investigate the potential associations of weight-controlling and health-conscious
eating behaviors with nutritional and health status. In the first phase, the original scale was
adapted into Turkish, and its validity and reliability analyses were conducted on a total of
299 healthy individuals, consisting of 161 men and 138 women aged between 19 and 64.
In the second phase, the SEV-Tr was retested on a sample of 110 healthy adult individuals
(56 men and 54 women) with a mean age of 35.12 ± 12.98. Additionally, the relationships
between participants' SEV-Tr scores and their nutritional status, general mental health
assessed using the General Health Questionnaire-12 (GHQ-12), and other eating behaviors
(uncontrolled eating, cognitive restraint and emotional eating) assessed using the ThreeFactor Eating Questionnaire (TFEQ-Tr21) were examined. Statistical analyses were
performed using AMOS 20.00 and SPSS 22.0 software packages. In the first phase, the
linguistic equivalence, validity, and reliability of the SEV-Tr were demonstrated. A twodimensional structure was identified for the SEV-Tr, and named "health-conscious eating
behavior" and "weight- control eating behavior". In the second phase, participants were
clustered based on their weight-controlling and health-conscious eating behaviors
(F=59.46, p=0.01). Individuals in the low score cluster of weight-controlling and healthconscious eating behaviors were found to have higher lean body mass, serum triglyceride
levels, emotional eating behavior and lower levels of cognitive restraint behavior (p<0.05
for each). Also, participants with high levels of health-conscious eating behavior had
higher serum HDL cholesterol (r=0.23, p=0.02). According to statistically significant
regression models, low emotional eating and high cognitive restraint behavior were
associated with an increase in weight-controlling and health-conscious eating behaviors.
A statistically significant positive association was observed between individuals' mean
HDL cholesterol levels and their GSA-12 scores (p<0.05). It was found that individuals in
the low score cluster in terms of weight-controlling and health-conscious eating behaviors
had a statistically significant lower risk of deterioration in mental health (p<0.05). This
study provides a valid and reliable version of the SEV suitable for use in the Turkish
population, while also highlighting the associations of weight-controlling and healthconscious eating behaviors with cognitive restraint, emotional eating behavior, mental
health, and cardiometabolic indicators.