Costanzo Giulia, Barberis Nadia, Cannavò Marco, Infurna Maria Rita, Bevacqua Eleonora, Guarneri Claudia, Sottile Jada, Tomba Elena, Falgares Giorgio
Department of Psychology, Educational Science, and Human Movement, University of Palermo, 90128 Palermo, Italy.
Department of Health Sciences, University Magna Graecia of Catanzaro, 88100 Catanzaro, Italy.
Nutrients. 2025 Mar 5;17(5):902. doi: 10.3390/nu17050902.
BACKGROUND/OBJECTIVES: Pregnancy is a critical period marked by significant transformations that can trigger or exacerbate eating disorder symptoms. Childhood emotional maltreatment, including abuse and neglect, is a known risk factor for disordered eating, yet its specific impact during pregnancy remains unexplored. For this reason, this study aimed to examine the link between childhood emotional maltreatment and eating disorder symptoms in pregnant women, also focusing on the potential mediating and moderating variables involved in this association. Specifically, this study explored the mediating role of prenatal emotional distress, whereas prenatal social support was investigated as a protective factor able to moderate the effects of past trauma on disordered eating during this sensitive period.
Participants were 272 Italian pregnant women (aged 18-48, = 31.21, = 4.95) who were asked to respond to four self-report instruments: Childhood Trauma Questionnaire-Short Form; Eating Disorder Examination-Questionnaire Short; Perinatal Assessment of Maternal Affectivity; and Maternity Social Support Scale.
The results showed that prenatal emotional distress totally mediated the association between childhood emotional maltreatment and eating disorder symptoms in pregnant women ( = 0.20; SE = 0.06; 95% CI: 0.08, 0.33; < 0.001). Moreover, moderation analysis showed that prenatal social support only moderated the direct link between childhood emotional maltreatment and disordered eating, so higher levels of childhood emotional maltreatment were predictive of higher levels of eating disorder symptoms only among pregnant women with low levels of prenatal social support ( = 0.17; SE = 0.06; = 2.73; 95% CI: 0.05, 0.30; < 0.01). The limitations and clinical implications are discussed.
背景/目的:孕期是一个关键时期,其特点是会发生重大变化,这些变化可能引发或加剧饮食失调症状。童年期情感虐待,包括虐待和忽视,是饮食失调的一个已知风险因素,但其在孕期的具体影响仍未得到探索。因此,本研究旨在探讨孕妇童年期情感虐待与饮食失调症状之间的联系,同时关注这一关联中潜在的中介和调节变量。具体而言,本研究探讨了产前情绪困扰的中介作用,而产前社会支持则作为一个保护因素进行研究,该因素能够在这个敏感时期调节过去创伤对饮食失调的影响。
研究对象为272名意大利孕妇(年龄18 - 48岁,平均年龄 = 31.21岁,标准差 = 4.95岁),她们被要求回答四种自我报告工具:儿童创伤问卷简表;饮食失调检查问卷简表;围产期母亲情感评估;以及产妇社会支持量表。
结果表明,产前情绪困扰完全中介了孕妇童年期情感虐待与饮食失调症状之间的关联(β = 0.20;标准误 = 0.06;95%置信区间:0.08,0.33;p < 0.001)。此外,调节分析表明,产前社会支持仅调节了童年期情感虐待与饮食失调之间的直接联系,因此只有在产前社会支持水平较低的孕妇中,较高水平的童年期情感虐待才预示着较高水平的饮食失调症状(β = 0.17;标准误 = 0.06;t = 2.73;95%置信区间:0.05,0.30;p < 0.01)。文中讨论了研究的局限性和临床意义。