Madison Maynard, Emily K Burr, Quinn Allen, Robert D Dvorak, Daniel Paulson
{"title":"Loss-of-Control-Eating Mediates the Relationship between Cannabis-Related Problems and Eating Pathology.","authors":"Madison Maynard, Emily K Burr, Quinn Allen, Robert D Dvorak, Daniel Paulson","doi":"10.1177/00332941231161999","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><p>The prevalence of eating pathology among college students has increased significantly in recent years. This coincides with increases in the use of cannabis, both nationally, but also among college students. Problematic cannabis use has been linked to eating pathology in prior research. Research also shows that cannabis may affect appetitive drives linked to food consumption. The current study tested the hypothesis that the association between problem cannabis use and eating pathology was mediated by greater loss of control eating. Cross-sectional data were collected from a sample of 805 college student cannabis users at a large Southeastern university in the U.S. The sample were primarily Caucasian (76%) and female (65.22%) with an average age of 20.15 (<i>SD</i> = 3.91). Participants completed surveys assessing eating outcomes (loss of control eating and eating pathology), cannabis use, and cannabis-related problems. The analysis used an observed variable path model. After controlling for cannabis use, cannabis-related problems were indirectly linked to eating pathology via loss of control eating (<i>B</i> = 0.109, <i>SE</i> = 0.025, <i>p</i> < .001), supporting the primary hypothesis. The direct relationship between cannabis-related problems and eating pathology was fully accounted for (<i>B</i> = 0.010, <i>SE</i> = 0.028, <i>p</i> = .724) by the indirect effect of loss of control eating. These data suggest that the association between problematic forms of cannabis use and eating pathology may be due to the association between cannabis problems and loss of control eating. While this may be due to changes in appetite and food evaluation as a function of more problematic use patterns, it may also be that individuals with problematic cannabis use have more problematic eating patterns due to deficits in adaptive coping strategies. Future research should seek to parse out these different potential explanations.</p>","PeriodicalId":21149,"journal":{"name":"Psychological Reports","volume":" ","pages":"2244-2256"},"PeriodicalIF":1.7000,"publicationDate":"2025-08-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Psychological Reports","FirstCategoryId":"102","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1177/00332941231161999","RegionNum":4,"RegionCategory":"心理学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"2023/3/15 0:00:00","PubModel":"Epub","JCR":"Q2","JCRName":"PSYCHOLOGY, MULTIDISCIPLINARY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
The prevalence of eating pathology among college students has increased significantly in recent years. This coincides with increases in the use of cannabis, both nationally, but also among college students. Problematic cannabis use has been linked to eating pathology in prior research. Research also shows that cannabis may affect appetitive drives linked to food consumption. The current study tested the hypothesis that the association between problem cannabis use and eating pathology was mediated by greater loss of control eating. Cross-sectional data were collected from a sample of 805 college student cannabis users at a large Southeastern university in the U.S. The sample were primarily Caucasian (76%) and female (65.22%) with an average age of 20.15 (SD = 3.91). Participants completed surveys assessing eating outcomes (loss of control eating and eating pathology), cannabis use, and cannabis-related problems. The analysis used an observed variable path model. After controlling for cannabis use, cannabis-related problems were indirectly linked to eating pathology via loss of control eating (B = 0.109, SE = 0.025, p < .001), supporting the primary hypothesis. The direct relationship between cannabis-related problems and eating pathology was fully accounted for (B = 0.010, SE = 0.028, p = .724) by the indirect effect of loss of control eating. These data suggest that the association between problematic forms of cannabis use and eating pathology may be due to the association between cannabis problems and loss of control eating. While this may be due to changes in appetite and food evaluation as a function of more problematic use patterns, it may also be that individuals with problematic cannabis use have more problematic eating patterns due to deficits in adaptive coping strategies. Future research should seek to parse out these different potential explanations.
近年来,大学生饮食病理的患病率明显上升。与此同时,大麻的使用量也在增加,不仅是在全国范围内,在大学生中也是如此。在之前的研究中,有问题的大麻使用与饮食病理有关。研究还表明,大麻可能会影响与食物消费有关的食欲驱动。目前的研究测试了一个假设,即问题大麻使用和饮食病理之间的联系是由更大程度的饮食失控所介导的。横断面数据来自美国东南部一所大型大学的805名大学生大麻使用者样本,样本主要是白人(76%)和女性(65.22%),平均年龄为20.15岁(SD = 3.91)。参与者完成了评估饮食结果(饮食失控和饮食病理)、大麻使用和大麻相关问题的调查。分析使用了观察变量路径模型。在控制了大麻的使用后,大麻相关问题通过失去控制饮食间接与饮食病理相关(B = 0.109, SE = 0.025, p < 0.001),支持了最初的假设。大麻相关问题与饮食病理之间的直接关系(B = 0.010, SE = 0.028, p = .724)完全被失去控制饮食的间接影响所解释。这些数据表明,有问题的大麻使用形式与饮食病理之间的联系可能是由于大麻问题与饮食失控之间的联系。虽然这可能是由于食欲和食物评价的变化作为更有问题的使用模式的功能,但也可能是有问题的大麻使用的个人由于适应性应对策略的缺陷而有更多的问题饮食模式。未来的研究应该寻求解析出这些不同的潜在解释。