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Negative Mood and Food Craving Strength Among Women with Overweight: Implications for Targeting Mechanisms Using a Mindful Eating Intervention

OBJECTIVES: When experiencing negative mood, people often eat to improve their mood. A learned association between mood and eating may cultivate frequent food cravings, detracting from health goals. Training in mindful eating may target this cycle of emotion-craving-eating by teaching individuals to...

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Autores principales: Sagui-Henson, Sara J., Radin, Rachel M., Jhaveri, Kinnari, Brewer, Judson A., Cohn, Michael, Hartogensis, Wendy, Mason, Ashley E.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Springer US 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8460847/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34584574
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12671-021-01760-z
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author Sagui-Henson, Sara J.
Radin, Rachel M.
Jhaveri, Kinnari
Brewer, Judson A.
Cohn, Michael
Hartogensis, Wendy
Mason, Ashley E.
author_facet Sagui-Henson, Sara J.
Radin, Rachel M.
Jhaveri, Kinnari
Brewer, Judson A.
Cohn, Michael
Hartogensis, Wendy
Mason, Ashley E.
author_sort Sagui-Henson, Sara J.
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVES: When experiencing negative mood, people often eat to improve their mood. A learned association between mood and eating may cultivate frequent food cravings, detracting from health goals. Training in mindful eating may target this cycle of emotion-craving-eating by teaching individuals to manage urges when experiencing negative mood. We examined the impact of a mobile mindful eating intervention on the link between negative mood and food cravings among overweight women. METHODS: In a single-arm trial, participants (n = 64, M age = 46.1 years, M BMI = 31.5 kg/m(2)) completed ecological momentary assessments of negative mood and food cravings 3 times/day for 3 days pre- and post-intervention, as well as 1-month post-intervention. Using multilevel linear regression, we compared associations between negative mood and food craving strength at pre- vs. post-intervention (model 1) and post-intervention vs. 1-month follow-up (model 2). RESULTS: In model 1, negative mood interacted with time point (β =  − .20, SE = .09, p = .02, 95% CI [− .38, − .03]) to predict craving strength, indicating that the within-person association between negative mood and craving strength was significantly weaker at post-intervention (β = 0.18) relative to pre-intervention (β = 0.38). In model 2, negative mood did not interact with time point to predict craving strength (β = .13, SE = .09, p = .10, 95% CI − .03, .31]); the association did not significantly differ between post-intervention and 1-month follow-up. CONCLUSIONS: Training in mindful eating weakened the mood-craving association from pre- to post-intervention. The weakened association remained at follow-up. Our findings highlight the mood-craving link as a target-worthy mechanism of mindful eating that should be assessed in clinical trials. TRIAL REGISTRATION: NCT02694731 SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s12671-021-01760-z.
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spelling pubmed-84608472021-09-24 Negative Mood and Food Craving Strength Among Women with Overweight: Implications for Targeting Mechanisms Using a Mindful Eating Intervention Sagui-Henson, Sara J. Radin, Rachel M. Jhaveri, Kinnari Brewer, Judson A. Cohn, Michael Hartogensis, Wendy Mason, Ashley E. Mindfulness (N Y) Original Paper OBJECTIVES: When experiencing negative mood, people often eat to improve their mood. A learned association between mood and eating may cultivate frequent food cravings, detracting from health goals. Training in mindful eating may target this cycle of emotion-craving-eating by teaching individuals to manage urges when experiencing negative mood. We examined the impact of a mobile mindful eating intervention on the link between negative mood and food cravings among overweight women. METHODS: In a single-arm trial, participants (n = 64, M age = 46.1 years, M BMI = 31.5 kg/m(2)) completed ecological momentary assessments of negative mood and food cravings 3 times/day for 3 days pre- and post-intervention, as well as 1-month post-intervention. Using multilevel linear regression, we compared associations between negative mood and food craving strength at pre- vs. post-intervention (model 1) and post-intervention vs. 1-month follow-up (model 2). RESULTS: In model 1, negative mood interacted with time point (β =  − .20, SE = .09, p = .02, 95% CI [− .38, − .03]) to predict craving strength, indicating that the within-person association between negative mood and craving strength was significantly weaker at post-intervention (β = 0.18) relative to pre-intervention (β = 0.38). In model 2, negative mood did not interact with time point to predict craving strength (β = .13, SE = .09, p = .10, 95% CI − .03, .31]); the association did not significantly differ between post-intervention and 1-month follow-up. CONCLUSIONS: Training in mindful eating weakened the mood-craving association from pre- to post-intervention. The weakened association remained at follow-up. Our findings highlight the mood-craving link as a target-worthy mechanism of mindful eating that should be assessed in clinical trials. TRIAL REGISTRATION: NCT02694731 SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s12671-021-01760-z. Springer US 2021-09-24 2021 /pmc/articles/PMC8460847/ /pubmed/34584574 http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12671-021-01760-z Text en © The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature 2021 This article is made available via the PMC Open Access Subset for unrestricted research re-use and secondary analysis in any form or by any means with acknowledgement of the original source. These permissions are granted for the duration of the World Health Organization (WHO) declaration of COVID-19 as a global pandemic.
spellingShingle Original Paper
Sagui-Henson, Sara J.
Radin, Rachel M.
Jhaveri, Kinnari
Brewer, Judson A.
Cohn, Michael
Hartogensis, Wendy
Mason, Ashley E.
Negative Mood and Food Craving Strength Among Women with Overweight: Implications for Targeting Mechanisms Using a Mindful Eating Intervention
title Negative Mood and Food Craving Strength Among Women with Overweight: Implications for Targeting Mechanisms Using a Mindful Eating Intervention
title_full Negative Mood and Food Craving Strength Among Women with Overweight: Implications for Targeting Mechanisms Using a Mindful Eating Intervention
title_fullStr Negative Mood and Food Craving Strength Among Women with Overweight: Implications for Targeting Mechanisms Using a Mindful Eating Intervention
title_full_unstemmed Negative Mood and Food Craving Strength Among Women with Overweight: Implications for Targeting Mechanisms Using a Mindful Eating Intervention
title_short Negative Mood and Food Craving Strength Among Women with Overweight: Implications for Targeting Mechanisms Using a Mindful Eating Intervention
title_sort negative mood and food craving strength among women with overweight: implications for targeting mechanisms using a mindful eating intervention
topic Original Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8460847/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34584574
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12671-021-01760-z
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