Habitual behavioural control moderates the relation between daily perceived stress and purging

Author:

Dougherty Elizabeth N.1,Bottera Angeline R.2,Murray Matthew F.1ORCID,Ekwonu Adaora1,Wildes Jennifer E.1,Haedt‐Matt Alissa A.3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Neuroscience University of Chicago Chicago IL USA

2. Department of Psychology University of Kansas Lawrence KS USA

3. Department of Psychology Illinois Institute of Technology Chicago IL USA

Abstract

AbstractObjectiveEvidence suggests that interpersonal stress plays a role in maintaining binge eating and purging (e.g., self‐induced vomiting, misuse of laxatives). Stress is especially likely to promote engagement in maladaptive behaviour if the behaviour is habitual; therefore, individuals whose binge eating and/or purging are habitual may be particularly likely to engage in these behaviours in the context of interpersonal stress. We aimed to investigate this hypothesis in a sample of women with binge eating and/or purging using ecological momentary assessment (EMA).MethodWomen (N = 81) with binge‐eating and/or purging symptoms completed a self‐report measure assessing habit strength of binge eating and purging followed by a 14‐day EMA protocol assessing daily perceived interpersonal stress and binge‐eating and purging episodes.ResultsHabit strength of purging moderated the within‐person effect of interpersonal stress on purging frequency, such that higher daily stress was associated with greater same‐day purging frequency when purging was more habitual. Contrary to expectations, the interactive effect of habit strength of binge eating and daily interpersonal stress on same‐day binge‐eating frequency was non‐significant.ConclusionsFindings suggest that individuals with habitual purging may be vulnerable to engaging in purging when they are experiencing high levels of interpersonal stress.

Funder

National Institute of Mental Health

Academy for Eating Disorders

American Psychological Association

Publisher

Wiley

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