| Literature DB >> 29409340 |
Mia Beck Lichtenstein1, Mark D Griffiths2, Simone Daugaard Hemmingsen3, René Klinkby Støving4.
Abstract
Background Behavioral addictions often onset in adolescence and increase the risk of psychological and social problems later in life. The core symptoms of addiction are tolerance, withdrawal symptoms, lack of control, and compulsive occupation with the behavior. Psychometrically validated tools are required for detection and early intervention. Adolescent screening instruments exist for several behavioral addictions including gambling and video gaming addiction but not for exercise addiction. Given recent empirical and clinical evidence that a minority of teenagers appear to be experiencing exercise addiction, a psychometrically robust screening instrument is required. Aims The aim of this study was to develop and test the psychometric properties of a youth version of the Exercise Addiction Inventory (EAI) - a robust screening instrument that has been used across different countries and cultures - and to assess the prevalence of exercise addiction and associated disturbed eating. Methods A cross-sectional survey was administered to three high-risk samples (n = 471) aged 11-20 years (mean age: 16.3 years): sport school students, fitness center attendees, and patients with eating disorder diagnoses. A youth version of the EAI (EAI-Y) was developed and distributed. Participants were also screened for disordered eating with the SCOFF Questionnaire. Results Overall, the EAI-Y demonstrated good reliability and construct validity. The prevalence rate of exercise addiction was 4.0% in school athletes, 8.7% in fitness attendees, and 21% in patients with eating disorders. Exercise addiction was associated with feelings of guilt when not exercising, ignoring pain and injury, and higher levels of body dissatisfaction.Entities:
Keywords: adolescent addiction; behavioral addiction; disordered eating; exercise addiction; exercise dependence
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29409340 PMCID: PMC6035018 DOI: 10.1556/2006.7.2018.01
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Behav Addict ISSN: 2062-5871 Impact factor: 6.756
Demographic characteristics and responses to exercise and eating concerns
| Sport school students ( | Fitness members ( | Eating disorder patients ( | |
|---|---|---|---|
| ANOVA | Mean ( | Mean ( | Mean ( |
| Mean age in years | 15.8 (1.3) | 17.6 (1.4) | 15.8 (2.3) |
| BMI mean | 21.3 (2.4) | 22.0 (2.5) | 18.2 (4.1) |
| BMI percentile mean | 74.3 (22.3) | 72.3 (23.7) | 32.9 (34.3) |
| Weekly exercise amounts | 9.0 (1.8) | 8.2 (2.0) | 4.8 (3.2) |
| EAI-Y total score | 18.1 (3.3) | 18.9 (3.7) | 16.9 (6.8) |
| SCOFF total score | 0.8 (1.0) | 1.3 (1.3) | 2.6 (1.4) |
| Chi-square | Percent (number) | Percent (number) | Percent (number) |
| Exercise in spite of pain + injury | 34.9 (89 of 255) | 42.5 (54 of 127) | 24.1 (21 of 87) |
| Feeling guilty when not exercising | 41.0 (105 of 256) | 63.8 (81 of 127) | 51.7 (45 of 87) |
| Eating less to regulate weight | 17.6 (45 of 256) | 30.7 (39 of 127) | 37.9 (33 of 87) |
| Reduced performance due to excessive exercise | 4.7 (12 of 254) | 3.9 (5 of 127) | 6.9 (6 of 87) |
| Reduced performance due to weight loss | 2.4 (6 of 255) | 3.2 (4 of 126) | 28.7 (23 of 80) |
| SCOFF 1: vomit to compensate | 8.2 (21 of 256) | 11.8 (15 of 127) | 32.9 (27 of 82) |
| SCOFF 2: loss of control over eating | 12.9 (33 of 256) | 21.4 (27 of 126) | 61.0 (50 of 82) |
| SCOFF 3: weight loss | 5.1 (13 of 254) | 14.2 (18 of 127) | 40.2 (33 of 82) |
| SCOFF 4: feeling fat though thin | 32.8 (84 of 256) | 46.5 (59 of 127) | 65.9 (54 of 82) |
| SCOFF 5: food dominates life | 19.6 (50 of 255) | 34.1 (43 of 126) | 58.0 (47 of 81) |
Note. BMI: body mass index; EAI-Y: Exercise Addiction Inventory for youth; SCOFF: eating disorder screening tool; ANOVA: analysis of variance; SD: standard deviation.
Factor loadings and model fit for the Exercise Addiction Inventory for youth
| Factor loadings | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Eigenvalues | Item | Loading | Model fit | ||
| Factor 1 | 1.95 | EAI_1 | 0.56 | CFI | 0.92 |
| Factor 2 | 0.30 | EAI_2 | 0.58 | TLI | 0.86 |
| Factor 3 | 0.00 | EAI_3 | 0.57 | RMSEA | 0.10 |
| Factor 4 | −0.02 | EAI_4 | 0.49 | ||
| Factor 5 | −0.12 | EAI_5 | 0.71 | ||
| Factor 6 | −0.14 | EAI_6 | 0.48 | ||
Note. EAI: Exercise Addiction Inventory; CFI: comparative fit index; TLI: Tucker–Lewis index; RMSEA: root mean square error of approximation.
Pearson’s correlation coefficients between total EAI score and four variables related to excessive and obsessive exercise attitudes/consequences
| Weekly exercise amount | Exercise in spite of pain and injury | Feelings of guilt when not exercising | Reduced sport performance | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pearson’s | .4 | .5 | .4 | .3 |
Note. EAI: Exercise Addiction Inventory.
p < .001.
Exercise addiction predicting disordered exercise and eating attitudes
| Addiction Prevalence | No addiction Prevalence | Crude level OR | 95% CI | Eating disorder adjustment | 95% CI | Age + gender adjustment | 95% CI | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Exercise in spite of pain and injury | 64.1% (25 of 39) | 32.3% (137 of 424) | 3.7*** | [1.71, 8.15] | 5.3*** | [2.27, 12.23] | 4.3** | [1.78, 10.59] |
| Feeling guilty when no exercise | 97.4% (38 of 39) | 45.2% (192 of 425) | 45.9*** | [19.66, 107.25] | 49.1*** | [20.50, 117.63] | 42.7*** | [15.95, 114.24] |
| Reduced performance due to excessive exercise | 61.5% (24 of 39) | 21.6% (92 of 425) | 4.9** | [1.89, 12.91] | 5.0** | [1.72, 14.32] | 3.9** | [1.47, 10.27] |
| Eating less to regulate weight | 17.9% (7 of 39) | 3.8% (16 of 423) | 5.8*** | [2.83, 11.79] | 5.0*** | [2.50, 9.81] | 4.2*** | [1.85, 9.45] |
| Reduced performance due to weight loss | 17.9% (7 of 39) | 6.3% (26 of 416) | 0.5 | [0.24, 1.06] | 1.0 | [0.37, 2.90] | 1.1 | [0.43, 3.00] |
| SCOFF 1: vomit to compensate | 23.1% (9 of 39) | 12.9% (54 of 420) | 2.0 | [0.91, 4.50] | 1.2 | [0.40, 3.62] | 1.1 | [0.34, 3.30] |
| SCOFF 2: loss of control over eating | 48.7% (19 of 39) | 21.7% (91 of 419) | 4.4*** | [1.88, 10.41] | 3.4** | [1.53, 7.72] | 2.7* | [1.12, 6.65] |
| SCOFF 3: weight loss | 23.1% (9 of 39) | 13.2% (55 of 418) | 3.4** | [1.52, 7.66] | 2.0 | [0.89, 4.59] | 1.8 | [0.72, 4.43] |
| SCOFF 4: feeling fat though thin | 74.4% (29 of 39) | 39.5% (166 of 420) | 8.0*** | [3.34, 19.03] | 6.1*** | [2.83, 13.16] | 5.0*** | [2.09, 11.82] |
| SCOFF 5: food dominates life | 74.4% (29 of 39) | 26.6% (111 of 417) | 2.0 | [0.92, 4.23] | 1.0 | [0.35, 2.71] | 0.9 | [0.31, 2.57] |
Note. Logistic regression with bootstrapped variance estimation. Exercise addiction defined as EAI-Y ≥24 and SCOFF items representing eating disorder symptoms. Adjusted for presence of eating disorder and subsequently for age, gender, and eating disorder. OR: odds ratio; 95% CI: 95% confidence interval.
Prevalence rates are reported in percentage and numbers. Statistical significance was tested with χ2. All prevalence results were significantly different between the two groups at p level .05, except SCOFF1 and SCOFF3 that were above .05.
*p < .05.**p < .01. ***p < .001.
| 1. Exercise is the most important thing in my life. |
| 2. I have conflicts with family or friends because I exercise so much. |
| 3. I use exercise to change my mood (e.g., to feel happier or forget about problems). |
| 4. Over the last year, I have increased the amount of daily exercise that I do. |
| 5. If I don’t exercise every day, I get restless, upset, or sad. |
| 6. I have tried to reduce the amount of exercise I do but end up exercising as much as I did before. |