NEW YORK - Women who accept 
their bodies, flaws and all, are more likely to eat healthily or intuitively, 
new research shows. This suggests that women's typical reasons for dieting 
dissatisfaction with their bodies may backfire. 
"There is a lot of negative body talk among women; women think that they can 
best lose weight and feel better if they are first dissatisfied with their 
bodies," Dr. Tracy Tylka told Reuters Health. "Rather, this research shows that 
adopting a positive body image is more likely to be associated with intuitive 
eating." 
Intuitive eaters don't diet - they recognize and respond to internal hunger 
and fullness cues to regulate what and how much they eat, Tylka explained. 
Intuitive eating has three components: "unconditional permission to eat when 
hungry and whatever food is desired; eating for physical rather than emotional 
reasons; and reliance on internal hunger/fullness cues." 
Tylka, an assistant professor of psychology at Ohio State University's Marion 
campus has conducted several studies on the concept of intuitive eating. In one 
study published in April involving 199 college-aged women, Tylka found that 
women who followed intuitive eating principles had a slightly lower body weight 
than women who did not. 
"Intuitive eating was negatively associated with body mass, such that people 
who ate intuitively weighed less than people who dieted," she said. 
In her latest studies presented this month at the American Psychological 
Association meeting, Tylka and her colleagues examined who was most likely to 
follow intuitive eating principles. 
They found, among nearly 600 college women, that those with higher levels of 
appreciation and acceptance for their body were more likely to be intuitive 
eaters. 
Intuitive eaters spend less time thinking about how their body appears to 
others and more time considering how their body feels and functions, Tylka 
observed. They "perceive the body as an agent of action rather than an object of 
attraction...focusing on how the body functions rather than its appearance," 
Tylka told Reuters Health. 
Intuitive eating, Tylka's found, is "positively associated with psychological 
well-being, such as self-esteem, positive emotions, adaptive coping, 
self-acceptance, optimism, and resilience in the face of stress." 
Intuitive eaters also reported receiving more positive messages from parents 
and others regarding their bodies.