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Trait self-control and disinhibited eating in COVID-19: The mediating role of perceived mortality threat and negative affect

Authors :
Yanli Wang
Yong Liu
Hong Chen
Shiqing Song
Xiaobao Li
Guangcan Xiang
Mingyue Xiao
Yi-jun Luo
Qingqing Li
Source :
Appetite. 167
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

As the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) spreads globally, people are at risk of developing disinhibited eating behaviors. This study aimed to examine whether perceived mortality threat and negative affect mediate the relationship between trait self-control and disinhibited eating during the pandemic. A longitudinal survey was administered to a sample of college students (N = 634) before the outbreak (September 2019, T1), during the mid-term (February 2020, T2), and in the later stage of the pandemic (April 2020, T3). Self-report measures of trait self-control (T1), perceived mortality threat (T2, T3), negative affect (T2, T3), and disinhibited eating (T2, T3) were successively completed. Trait self-control was found to be negatively associated with negative affect, perceived mortality threat, and disinhibited eating during the mid-term and later stage of the pandemic. Disinhibited eating was positively associated with negative affect and perceived mortality threat. The longitudinal mediation results demonstrated that trait self-control (T1) could negatively predict disinhibited eating (T3) through negative affect (T2) rather than through perceived mortality threat. These findings suggest that trait self-control is of great importance in regulating psychological discomfort and disinhibited eating during stressful periods and that negative affect might be the main psychological mechanism underlying the relationship between self-control ability and disinhibited eating.

Details

ISSN :
10958304
Volume :
167
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Appetite
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e7ab0167a949efeb6d3f6d89d6440fb9