Background: The potential impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on weight, shape-related appearance behaviors (body image dissatisfaction), and bulimic symptoms in nonclinical participants is poorly evaluated. This study aimed to identify the relationship between labor status, confinement degree due to COVID-19, dissatisfaction with body image, and anxiety and to discover its effect on bulimic behavior in Mexican adults. Methods: A cross-sectional study was conducted with a non-probabilistic sample of 276 participants via an online survey. Questions addressed their anxiety, body image dissatisfaction, and bulimic behavior. Results: The path analysis showed direct effects on the confinement degree ( β = −0.157); of the labor situation ( β = −0.147) and gender ( β = 0.129) on anxiety; of dissatisfaction on bulimic behavior ( β = 0.443) and anxiety about bulimic behavior ( β = 0.184); and dissatisfaction ( β = 0.085). Conclusions: The confinement, gender, and labor status are predictors of anxiety, while anxiety and body dissatisfaction directly influence bulimic behavior.
【저자키워드】 COVID-19, Anxiety, Body image, home confinement, body dissatisfaction, bulimic behavior, 【초록키워드】 cross-sectional, COVID-19 pandemic, Gender, Symptom, Adults, predictor, Analysis, participant, Effect, identify, evaluated, conducted, addressed, 【제목키워드】 Behavior, Image, Body,