Objective
Previous research has shown a relationship between financial difficulties and poor mental health in students, but there has been no research examining such a relationship for eating attitudes.
Method
A group of 444 British undergraduate students completed the Index of Financial Stress and the Eating Attitudes Test (26‐item version) at up to four time points across a year at university.
Results
Higher baseline financial difficulties significantly predicted higher eating attitudes scores at Times 3 and 4 (up to a year), after adjusting for demographic variables and baseline eating attitudes score. Lower family affluence also predicted higher eating attitudes scores at Time 4 (up to a year). A higher eating attitudes score at baseline also significantly predicted greater financial difficulties at Time 2 (3–4 months). When considering these relationships by gender, they were significant for women only.
Discussion
Greater financial difficulties and lower family affluence predict a worsening in eating attitudes over time in female students. The relationship appears to be partially bi‐directional, with financial difficulties driving poorer eating attitudes in the shorter term. © 2015 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. (Int J Eat Disord 2015; 48:517–521)