Food Addiction Is Associated with Irrational Beliefs via Trait Anxiety and Emotional Eating

Irrational beliefs (IB) are believed, in cognitive behavioral therapies, to be a prime cause of psychopathologies including anxiety, depression, problem eating, and alcohol misuse. “Food addiction” (FA), which has been modeled on diagnostic criteria for substance use disorder, an...

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Main Authors: Laurence J. Nolan, Steve M. Jenkins
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2019-07-01
Series:Nutrients
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2072-6643/11/8/1711
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spelling doaj-c646895a817e4aafb90fb39f0fe16df32020-11-24T21:21:02ZengMDPI AGNutrients2072-66432019-07-01118171110.3390/nu11081711nu11081711Food Addiction Is Associated with Irrational Beliefs via Trait Anxiety and Emotional EatingLaurence J. Nolan0Steve M. Jenkins1Department of Psychology, Wagner College, 1 Campus Rd., Staten Island, NY 10301, USADepartment of Psychology, Wagner College, 1 Campus Rd., Staten Island, NY 10301, USAIrrational beliefs (IB) are believed, in cognitive behavioral therapies, to be a prime cause of psychopathologies including anxiety, depression, problem eating, and alcohol misuse. “Food addiction” (FA), which has been modeled on diagnostic criteria for substance use disorder, and emotional eating (EE) have both been implicated in the rise in overweight and obesity. Both FA and EE are associated with anxiety. Thus, in the present study, the hypothesis that IB is associated with FA and with EE was tested. Furthermore, possible mediation of these relationships by trait anxiety and depression (and EE for IB and FA) was examined. The responses of 239 adult participants to questionnaires measuring FA, IB, EE, depression, trait anxiety, and anthropometrics were recorded. The results revealed that IB was significantly positively correlated with FA and EE (and depression and trait anxiety). Furthermore, only EE mediated the effect of IB on FA and this was not moderated by BMI. Finally, trait anxiety (but not depression) mediated the effect of IB on EE. Exploratory analysis revealed a significant serial mediation such that IB predicted higher FA via elevated trait anxiety and emotional eating in that order. The results of this study suggest that IB may be a source of the anxiety that is associated with EE and FA and suggest that clinicians may find IB a target for treatment of those persons who report experiences of EE and FA. IB may play a role in food misuse that leads to elevated BMI.https://www.mdpi.com/2072-6643/11/8/1711food addictionirrational beliefsemotional eatinganxietyfood misuse
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Laurence J. Nolan
Steve M. Jenkins
spellingShingle Laurence J. Nolan
Steve M. Jenkins
Food Addiction Is Associated with Irrational Beliefs via Trait Anxiety and Emotional Eating
Nutrients
food addiction
irrational beliefs
emotional eating
anxiety
food misuse
author_facet Laurence J. Nolan
Steve M. Jenkins
author_sort Laurence J. Nolan
title Food Addiction Is Associated with Irrational Beliefs via Trait Anxiety and Emotional Eating
title_short Food Addiction Is Associated with Irrational Beliefs via Trait Anxiety and Emotional Eating
title_full Food Addiction Is Associated with Irrational Beliefs via Trait Anxiety and Emotional Eating
title_fullStr Food Addiction Is Associated with Irrational Beliefs via Trait Anxiety and Emotional Eating
title_full_unstemmed Food Addiction Is Associated with Irrational Beliefs via Trait Anxiety and Emotional Eating
title_sort food addiction is associated with irrational beliefs via trait anxiety and emotional eating
publisher MDPI AG
series Nutrients
issn 2072-6643
publishDate 2019-07-01
description Irrational beliefs (IB) are believed, in cognitive behavioral therapies, to be a prime cause of psychopathologies including anxiety, depression, problem eating, and alcohol misuse. “Food addiction” (FA), which has been modeled on diagnostic criteria for substance use disorder, and emotional eating (EE) have both been implicated in the rise in overweight and obesity. Both FA and EE are associated with anxiety. Thus, in the present study, the hypothesis that IB is associated with FA and with EE was tested. Furthermore, possible mediation of these relationships by trait anxiety and depression (and EE for IB and FA) was examined. The responses of 239 adult participants to questionnaires measuring FA, IB, EE, depression, trait anxiety, and anthropometrics were recorded. The results revealed that IB was significantly positively correlated with FA and EE (and depression and trait anxiety). Furthermore, only EE mediated the effect of IB on FA and this was not moderated by BMI. Finally, trait anxiety (but not depression) mediated the effect of IB on EE. Exploratory analysis revealed a significant serial mediation such that IB predicted higher FA via elevated trait anxiety and emotional eating in that order. The results of this study suggest that IB may be a source of the anxiety that is associated with EE and FA and suggest that clinicians may find IB a target for treatment of those persons who report experiences of EE and FA. IB may play a role in food misuse that leads to elevated BMI.
topic food addiction
irrational beliefs
emotional eating
anxiety
food misuse
url https://www.mdpi.com/2072-6643/11/8/1711
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