Stein Sara F, Miller Alison L, Nuttall Amy K, Bogat G Anne, Lonstein Joseph S, Muzik Maria, Levendosky Alytia A
Department of Health Behavior and Health Equity, University of Michigan School of Public Health, 1415 Washington Heights, Ann Arbor, MI, 48109, USA.
Department of Health Behavior and Health Equity, University of Michigan School of Public Health, 1415 Washington Heights, Ann Arbor, MI, 48109, USA.
Appetite. 2025 Jul 1;211:107984. doi: 10.1016/j.appet.2025.107984. Epub 2025 Mar 28.
Childhood maltreatment is a common and severe form of stress associated with compromised functioning in women including emotion regulation difficulties and eating behaviors associated with negative health outcomes. Although pregnancy is a sensitive period for women's health, mechanisms by which childhood maltreatment may drive eating behaviors during pregnancy remain unknown. The aim of this study was to determine if emotion regulation difficulty was a mechanism by which women's childhood maltreatment leads to emotional, external, and restraint eating during pregnancy and which types of maltreatment drive these associations.
Women (N = 446) were recruited during pregnancy based on experiences of pregnancy stress, including intimate partner violence. They reported on history of childhood maltreatment and emotion regulation difficulties and eating behaviors in pregnancy. We tested if emotion regulation difficulties mediated associations between childhood maltreatment and emotional, external, and restraint eating in pregnancy.
Maternal childhood maltreatment was associated with greater emotion regulation difficulties and, in turn, greater severity of emotional, external, and restraint eating during pregnancy. Emotional abuse and neglect were each positively associated with emotion regulation difficulties and, in turn, all three eating behaviors.
Emotion regulation difficulties may be a mechanism by which childhood maltreatment leads to emotional, external, and restraint eating during pregnancy. Interventions should address emotion regulation difficulties in women with histories of childhood emotional maltreatment and neglect as a way to mitigate these eating behaviors in pregnancy.
儿童期受虐是一种常见且严重的应激形式,与女性功能受损有关,包括情绪调节困难以及与负面健康结果相关的饮食行为。尽管孕期是女性健康的敏感期,但儿童期受虐在孕期引发饮食行为的机制仍不清楚。本研究的目的是确定情绪调节困难是否是女性儿童期受虐导致孕期情绪性、外在性和克制性饮食的一种机制,以及哪种类型的受虐会促成这些关联。
基于孕期应激经历(包括亲密伴侣暴力)招募孕期女性(N = 446)。她们报告了儿童期受虐史、情绪调节困难情况以及孕期的饮食行为。我们检验了情绪调节困难是否介导了儿童期受虐与孕期情绪性、外在性和克制性饮食之间的关联。
母亲童年期受虐与更大的情绪调节困难相关,进而与孕期情绪性、外在性和克制性饮食的更严重程度相关。情感虐待和忽视均与情绪调节困难呈正相关,进而与所有三种饮食行为呈正相关。
情绪调节困难可能是儿童期受虐导致孕期情绪性、外在性和克制性饮食的一种机制。干预措施应针对有儿童期情感虐待和忽视史的女性的情绪调节困难,以此减轻孕期的这些饮食行为。