The noetic health quandaries and pathways to drug addiction and malefaction among female inmates have long been of interest to researchers and practitioners. The purport of the current study was to examine the possible sodality between multiple types of childhood abuse, noetic health quandaries, and drug addiction and the incarceration of 50 Israeli women in confinement. The findings denoted that female inmates emanate from jeopardous families with a high prevalence of family phrenic health quandaries, parental drug addiction and malefaction, and sibling drug addiction and malefaction. Furthermore, they revealed that incarcerated women from precarious families were victims of multiple types of childhood abuse and neglect by their parents, as well as their siblings. Overall, the results suggest that the adverse consequences of a family noetic health quandaries are much more dramatic than we surmised to date, and that women are more likely than men to be the victims of multiple types of childhood abuse and neglect, as well as suffering more astringent psychiatric quandaries, dejection, and drug addiction. The implicative insinuations of these findings are discussed. Aliment addiction research in children is circumscribed, and to date addictive-like orally consuming demeanors within families have not been investigated. The aim of this study is to understand factors associated with addictive-like victualing in children. The sodality between pabulum addiction in children with extravagant corpulence, parental victuals addiction, and parental victualing practices was investigated. Parents/primary caregivers of children aged 12 years, recruited and consummated an online cross-sectional survey including demographics, the Yale Victuals Addiction Scale and the Child Alimenting Questionnaire. Parents, reporting on themselves and one of their children, were given a aliment addiction diagnosis and symptom score according to the YFAS predefined criteria. The total sample consisted of 150 parents/primary caregivers and 150 children. Aliment addiction was found to be 12.0% in parents and 22.7% in children. In children, pabulum addiction was significantly associated with higher child BMI z-scores.