Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Emotion regulation strategies as predictors of Japanese female athletes’ abnormal eating behavior
View through CrossRef
Abstract
Background
The media’s recent coverage of Japanese female athletes’ announcements that they have eating disorders and amenorrhea has provided an opening for attending to female athletes’ physical and mental health issues. Therefore, this study examined the relationship between emotion regulation strategies and abnormal eating disorders in Japanese female athletes.
Methods
Healthy female athletes (N = 140) who had never had an eating disorder completed the Abnormal Eating Behavior Scale, New Version (AEBS-NV), the Japanese version of the Emotion Regulation Questionnaire (ERQ-J), and the Japanese version of the Cognitive Emotion Regulation Questionnaire (Japanese version CERQ).
Results
The total AEBS-NV score positively correlated with “Rumination” (r = .26, p < .01), “Blaming others” (r = .32, p < .01), and “Catastrophizing” (r = .32, p < .01). In contrast, “Refocus on planning” negatively correlated with the total AEBS‒NV score (r = − .23, p < .01). We also used stepwise multiple regression analysis, with the two-factor ERQ-J and CERQ scores as independent variables and the five-factor AEBS‒NV scores as dependent variables. These results clarified the emotion regulation strategies associated with each type of abnormal eating disorder, that is, “Inappropriate diet behavior,” “Apprehension concerning food intake,” and “Binge eating.”
Conclusions
The findings suggest that emotion regulation strategies can increase and/or decrease each type of abnormal eating disorder and help prevent female athletes’ eating disorders. Future research should consider sport type as a variable and further investigate its relationships with emotion regulation strategies, abnormal eating behaviors, and self-evaluation of body shape.
Title: Emotion regulation strategies as predictors of Japanese female athletes’ abnormal eating behavior
Description:
Abstract
Background
The media’s recent coverage of Japanese female athletes’ announcements that they have eating disorders and amenorrhea has provided an opening for attending to female athletes’ physical and mental health issues.
Therefore, this study examined the relationship between emotion regulation strategies and abnormal eating disorders in Japanese female athletes.
Methods
Healthy female athletes (N = 140) who had never had an eating disorder completed the Abnormal Eating Behavior Scale, New Version (AEBS-NV), the Japanese version of the Emotion Regulation Questionnaire (ERQ-J), and the Japanese version of the Cognitive Emotion Regulation Questionnaire (Japanese version CERQ).
Results
The total AEBS-NV score positively correlated with “Rumination” (r = .
26, p < .
01), “Blaming others” (r = .
32, p < .
01), and “Catastrophizing” (r = .
32, p < .
01).
In contrast, “Refocus on planning” negatively correlated with the total AEBS‒NV score (r = − .
23, p < .
01).
We also used stepwise multiple regression analysis, with the two-factor ERQ-J and CERQ scores as independent variables and the five-factor AEBS‒NV scores as dependent variables.
These results clarified the emotion regulation strategies associated with each type of abnormal eating disorder, that is, “Inappropriate diet behavior,” “Apprehension concerning food intake,” and “Binge eating.
”
Conclusions
The findings suggest that emotion regulation strategies can increase and/or decrease each type of abnormal eating disorder and help prevent female athletes’ eating disorders.
Future research should consider sport type as a variable and further investigate its relationships with emotion regulation strategies, abnormal eating behaviors, and self-evaluation of body shape.
Related Results
What about males? Exploring sex differences in the relationship between emotion difficulties and eating disorders
What about males? Exploring sex differences in the relationship between emotion difficulties and eating disorders
Abstract
Objective: While eating disorders (ED) are more commonly diagnosed in females, there is growing awareness that men also experience ED and may do so in a different ...
Double Burden of Nutrition and some Eating Habits Characteristics of Preschool Children in Nam Hong Commune, Dong Anh district, Hanoi, 2018
Double Burden of Nutrition and some Eating Habits Characteristics of Preschool Children in Nam Hong Commune, Dong Anh district, Hanoi, 2018
Abstract: The study aims to provide evidence of double nutritional burden (including malnutrition and overweight/obesity) as well as the impact of eating habits on nutritional stat...
Disordered Eating Patterns and Body Image Perception in Athletes and Non-Athletes Students
Disordered Eating Patterns and Body Image Perception in Athletes and Non-Athletes Students
The aim of the present study was to investigate the relationship between body image perception and eating patterns in athletes and non athletes. The study also aimed to explore the...
Analysis of the performances of the Ukrainian national freestyle wrestling team at the U23 World and European Championships
Analysis of the performances of the Ukrainian national freestyle wrestling team at the U23 World and European Championships
Purpose: to analyze the performances of the Ukrainian national team at the U23 World and European Championships. Material and Methods. The following methods were used in the resear...
Body image concerns, dieting behavior, and eating disorder risk of Kenyan adolescent female athletes
Body image concerns, dieting behavior, and eating disorder risk of Kenyan adolescent female athletes
Aim: The purpose of this study was to investigate body image concerns, dieting behaviors, and eating disorder risk among adolescent female athletes (n=61) and non-athletes (n=49) i...
Dieting and disordered eating in German high school athletes and non‐athletes
Dieting and disordered eating in German high school athletes and non‐athletes
The purpose of this study was to examine weight concerns, dieting, body dissatisfaction as well as eating behavior of German high school athletes and to compare disordered eating b...
Zero to hero
Zero to hero
Western images of Japan tell a seemingly incongruous story of love, sex and marriage – one full of contradictions and conflicting moral codes. We sometimes hear intriguing stories ...
Reconceptualizing emotion regulation and coping strategy usage in eating disorders research: The utility of a regulatory flexibility framework
Reconceptualizing emotion regulation and coping strategy usage in eating disorders research: The utility of a regulatory flexibility framework
AbstractEmotion regulation and coping strategies are often conceptualized in eating disorder (ED) research as inherently adaptive or maladaptive, and successful regulation is often...

