An investigation into the relationship between adverse childhood experiences and food addiction: The role of urgency and emotion dysregulation

Food addiction is one of the most common substance or behavioural addictions and is linked to negative consequences. Thus, there is a need to investigate the risk factors associated with food addiction. The current study examined if emotion dysregulation mediated the relationship between adverse chi...

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Main Authors: Nalan Guney, Lindsey A. Snaychuk, Hyoun S. Kim
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2025-03-01
Series:Psychiatry Research Communications
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Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2772598725000054
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author Nalan Guney
Lindsey A. Snaychuk
Hyoun S. Kim
author_facet Nalan Guney
Lindsey A. Snaychuk
Hyoun S. Kim
author_sort Nalan Guney
collection DOAJ
description Food addiction is one of the most common substance or behavioural addictions and is linked to negative consequences. Thus, there is a need to investigate the risk factors associated with food addiction. The current study examined if emotion dysregulation mediated the relationship between adverse childhood experiences and food addiction and whether affective impulsivity (negative and positive urgency) uniquely moderated this relationship. Participants (N = 602) recruited from a large university completed an online survey consisting of several self-report measures, including symptoms of food addiction, childhood adversity, emotion dysregulation and affective impulsivity. A total of 6.5% of the participants met the cut-off for mild (n = 39) levels of food addiction, 3.8% met the cut-off for moderate (n = 23), and 5.0% met the cut-off for severe (n = 30) food addiction. Logistic regression results demonstrated that physical neglect, emotional abuse, physical abuse and household substance use were significant predictors of whether someone met the criteria for food addiction. Moderated mediation results indicated that adverse childhood experiences were positively associated with emotion dysregulation, affective impulsivity, and food addiction. However, contrary to our hypothesis we did not find significant moderated-mediation between emotion dysregulation, food addiction and affective impulsivity. The findings may carry implications for preventing and treating food addiction among university students with adverse childhood experiences. Future longitudinal research is necessary to understand how experiences of childhood adversities and emotion dysregulation can increase the risk of developing food addiction.
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spelling doaj-art-4b9b280fdd8b4c32a6b2f7771f0d8eda2025-08-20T03:01:42ZengElsevierPsychiatry Research Communications2772-59872025-03-015110020610.1016/j.psycom.2025.100206An investigation into the relationship between adverse childhood experiences and food addiction: The role of urgency and emotion dysregulationNalan Guney0Lindsey A. Snaychuk1Hyoun S. Kim2Department of Psychology, Toronto Metropolitan University, 350 Victoria Street, Toronto, ON, M5B 2K3, CanadaDepartment of Psychology, Toronto Metropolitan University, 350 Victoria Street, Toronto, ON, M5B 2K3, CanadaCorresponding author. Department of Psychology, Toronto Metropolitan University 350 Victoria Street, Toronto, ON, M5B 2K3, Canada.; Department of Psychology, Toronto Metropolitan University, 350 Victoria Street, Toronto, ON, M5B 2K3, CanadaFood addiction is one of the most common substance or behavioural addictions and is linked to negative consequences. Thus, there is a need to investigate the risk factors associated with food addiction. The current study examined if emotion dysregulation mediated the relationship between adverse childhood experiences and food addiction and whether affective impulsivity (negative and positive urgency) uniquely moderated this relationship. Participants (N = 602) recruited from a large university completed an online survey consisting of several self-report measures, including symptoms of food addiction, childhood adversity, emotion dysregulation and affective impulsivity. A total of 6.5% of the participants met the cut-off for mild (n = 39) levels of food addiction, 3.8% met the cut-off for moderate (n = 23), and 5.0% met the cut-off for severe (n = 30) food addiction. Logistic regression results demonstrated that physical neglect, emotional abuse, physical abuse and household substance use were significant predictors of whether someone met the criteria for food addiction. Moderated mediation results indicated that adverse childhood experiences were positively associated with emotion dysregulation, affective impulsivity, and food addiction. However, contrary to our hypothesis we did not find significant moderated-mediation between emotion dysregulation, food addiction and affective impulsivity. The findings may carry implications for preventing and treating food addiction among university students with adverse childhood experiences. Future longitudinal research is necessary to understand how experiences of childhood adversities and emotion dysregulation can increase the risk of developing food addiction.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2772598725000054Food addictionYFASRisk factorsModerationMediation
spellingShingle Nalan Guney
Lindsey A. Snaychuk
Hyoun S. Kim
An investigation into the relationship between adverse childhood experiences and food addiction: The role of urgency and emotion dysregulation
Psychiatry Research Communications
Food addiction
YFAS
Risk factors
Moderation
Mediation
title An investigation into the relationship between adverse childhood experiences and food addiction: The role of urgency and emotion dysregulation
title_full An investigation into the relationship between adverse childhood experiences and food addiction: The role of urgency and emotion dysregulation
title_fullStr An investigation into the relationship between adverse childhood experiences and food addiction: The role of urgency and emotion dysregulation
title_full_unstemmed An investigation into the relationship between adverse childhood experiences and food addiction: The role of urgency and emotion dysregulation
title_short An investigation into the relationship between adverse childhood experiences and food addiction: The role of urgency and emotion dysregulation
title_sort investigation into the relationship between adverse childhood experiences and food addiction the role of urgency and emotion dysregulation
topic Food addiction
YFAS
Risk factors
Moderation
Mediation
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2772598725000054
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