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The emergence of eating problems during childhood increases the risk for eating disorders (EDs) during young adulthood. Previous studies highlight a relationship between poor self-regulation and onset of eating pathology. In this study, we investigated whether this association is mediated by decision-making difficulties.
Methods
To test this hypothesis, we used data from the Millennium Cohort Study. Decision-making performance was assessed with the Cambridge Gambling Task at age 11. Principal components analysis was used to derive an index of ED symptoms at age 14. The trajectories of scores of two subscales of the Child Social Behaviour Questionnaire, Independence and Self-Regulation (ISR) and Emotional Dysregulation (EmotDy), were modelled from ages 3 to 7 years in a latent growth curve analysis. The individual predicted values of the intercept (set at baseline, 3 years) and the slope (rate of annual change) were then used in the mediation analysis.
Results
In our sample of 11 303 individuals, there was evidence for mediation by three measures of decision-making at age 11 (poor quality of decision-making, delay aversion and low risk-adjustment) in the association between EmotDy across ages 3–7 and ED symptoms at age 14 even after the adjustment for relevant covariates. We found no evidence of association between ISR and ED symptoms.
Conclusion
Our findings suggest that emotion regulation processes during childhood may be relevant for the future onset of ED symptoms via their association with decision-making skills. These findings, obtained from a large, representative, sample, shed light on the relationship between self-regulation, decision-making and symptoms of EDs.
By
Eric Stice, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX, USA,
Emily Burton, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX, USA,
Michael Lowe, Drexel University, Philadelphia, PA, USA,
Meghan Butryn, Drexel University, Philadelphia, PA, USA
One of the most widely studied risk factors for eating disorders is dieting. Theorists have proposed several mechanisms by which dieting might increase the risk for eating disorder symptoms. Dieting has become an increasingly common practice among adolescent and preadolescent females. Randomized trials that have examined the effects of long-term low-calorie diets on changes in binge eating and DSM-IV bulimic symptoms have generated findings that seem completely at odds with the dieting theory of eating pathology. This chapter consistently indicates that adolescents with elevated scores on dieting scales are at elevated risk for future onset of eating pathology. Elevated scores on dieting scales have emerged as the most consistent and robust risk factor for subsequent development of eating disorders. It would be highly desirable to develop objective and unobtrusive measures of dieting for use in prospective risk factor studies.
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