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. 2023 Aug;53(11):5167-5176.
doi: 10.1017/S0033291722002185. Epub 2022 Aug 1.

Between- and within-person effects of stress on emotional eating in women: a longitudinal study over 49 days

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Between- and within-person effects of stress on emotional eating in women: a longitudinal study over 49 days

Natasha Fowler et al. Psychol Med. 2023 Aug.

Abstract

Background: Stress is associated with binge eating and emotional eating (EE) cross-sectionally. However, few studies have examined stress longitudinally, limiting understanding of how within-person fluctuations in stress influence EE over time and whether stress is a risk factor or consequence of EE. Additionally, little is known regarding how the biological stress response relates to EE.

Methods: We used an intensive, longitudinal design to examine between-person and within-person effects of major life stress, daily stress, and cortisol on EE in a population-based sample of women (N = 477; ages 15-30; M = 21.8; s.d. = 3.0) from the Michigan State University Twin Registry. Participants reported past year major life stress, then provided daily ratings of EE and stress for 49 consecutive days. Hair cortisol concentration (HCC) was collected as a longitudinal biological stress measure.

Results: Women reported greater EE when they experienced greater mean stress across days (between-person effects) or greater stress relative to their own average on a given day (within-person effects). Daily stress was more strongly associated with EE than major life stress. However, the impact of daily stress on EE was amplified in women with greater past year major life stress. Finally, participants with lower HCC had increased EE.

Conclusions: Findings confirm longitudinal associations between stress and EE in women, and highlight the importance of within-person shifts in stress in EE risk. Results also highlight HCC as a novel biological stress measure that is significantly associated with EE and may overcome limitations of prior physiological stress response indicators.

Keywords: Stress; binge eating; cortisol, women; daily diary; emotional eating; longitudinal.

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Conflict of interest statement

The authors have no conflicts of interest to report. The authors assert that all procedures contributing to this work comply with the ethical standards of the relevant national and institutional committees on human experimentation and with the Helsinki Declaration of 1975, as revised in 2008.

Figures

Fig. 1.
Fig. 1.
Two-way interaction between average daily stress impact and major life stress in the last 12 months. ‘High’ and ‘low’ values represent 1 s.d. above and below the mean on major life stress and average daily stress impact, respectively.

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