Conceptualizing primary and secondary pathological exercise using available measures of excessive exercise
ABSTRACT Objective There is disagreement about the conceptualization and measurement of pathological exercise (PE). This study seeks to elucidate the nature of this phenomenon as addictive or compulsive in its primary and secondary forms. Method 1,497 adults (608 men, 885 women, 4 other) completed a...
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Published in: | The International journal of eating disorders Vol. 49; no. 8; pp. 778 - 792 |
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Abstract | ABSTRACT
Objective
There is disagreement about the conceptualization and measurement of pathological exercise (PE). This study seeks to elucidate the nature of this phenomenon as addictive or compulsive in its primary and secondary forms.
Method
1,497 adults (608 men, 885 women, 4 other) completed a set of validated surveys, including the Godin Leisure‐Time Exercise Questionnaire, the Exercise Dependence Scale‐21, the Exercise Addiction Inventory, the Compulsive Exercise Test (CET), the Obligatory Exercise Questionnaire, the Commitment to Exercise Scale, and an exercise specific adaptation of the Dimensional Obsessive‐Compulsive Scale (ESDOCS). Participants completed the Eating Disorders Examination Questionnaire, and DSM‐5 eating disorder (ED) diagnoses were determined according to published guidelines. Pearson correlation coefficients, independent samples t‐tests, χ2 tests, 1‐way ANOVA's, and ANCOVA's were calculated.
Results
All PE measures correlated highly with one another (P < 0.001). Participants with EDs scored higher on all measures than those without (P < 0.001), and those with bulimia nervosa had the highest scores. Participants with PE and an accompanying ED (secondary PE) scored higher than those with PE and no ED symptoms (primary ED) on the CET (P < 0.002) and ESDOCS (P < 0.003). Correlations between EDE‐Q and PE scores were stronger among women than men. PE prevalence was 6.4% (1.4% primary PE, 5.0% secondary PE) in our heterogeneous sample.
Discussion
Secondary PE appears to be more compulsive while primary PE is more addictive in nature. Men and women are equally at risk for PE, but in men it is more often primary and addictive and in women it is more often secondary and compulsive. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. (Int J Eat Disord 2016; 49:778–792) |
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AbstractList | ABSTRACT
Objective
There is disagreement about the conceptualization and measurement of pathological exercise (PE). This study seeks to elucidate the nature of this phenomenon as addictive or compulsive in its primary and secondary forms.
Method
1,497 adults (608 men, 885 women, 4 other) completed a set of validated surveys, including the Godin Leisure‐Time Exercise Questionnaire, the Exercise Dependence Scale‐21, the Exercise Addiction Inventory, the Compulsive Exercise Test (CET), the Obligatory Exercise Questionnaire, the Commitment to Exercise Scale, and an exercise specific adaptation of the Dimensional Obsessive‐Compulsive Scale (ESDOCS). Participants completed the Eating Disorders Examination Questionnaire, and DSM‐5 eating disorder (ED) diagnoses were determined according to published guidelines. Pearson correlation coefficients, independent samples t‐tests, χ2 tests, 1‐way ANOVA's, and ANCOVA's were calculated.
Results
All PE measures correlated highly with one another (P < 0.001). Participants with EDs scored higher on all measures than those without (P < 0.001), and those with bulimia nervosa had the highest scores. Participants with PE and an accompanying ED (secondary PE) scored higher than those with PE and no ED symptoms (primary ED) on the CET (P < 0.002) and ESDOCS (P < 0.003). Correlations between EDE‐Q and PE scores were stronger among women than men. PE prevalence was 6.4% (1.4% primary PE, 5.0% secondary PE) in our heterogeneous sample.
Discussion
Secondary PE appears to be more compulsive while primary PE is more addictive in nature. Men and women are equally at risk for PE, but in men it is more often primary and addictive and in women it is more often secondary and compulsive. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. (Int J Eat Disord 2016; 49:778–792) Objective There is disagreement about the conceptualization and measurement of pathological exercise (PE). This study seeks to elucidate the nature of this phenomenon as addictive or compulsive in its primary and secondary forms. Method 1,497 adults (608 men, 885 women, 4 other) completed a set of validated surveys, including the Godin Leisure-Time Exercise Questionnaire, the Exercise Dependence Scale-21, the Exercise Addiction Inventory, the Compulsive Exercise Test (CET), the Obligatory Exercise Questionnaire, the Commitment to Exercise Scale, and an exercise specific adaptation of the Dimensional Obsessive-Compulsive Scale (ESDOCS). Participants completed the Eating Disorders Examination Questionnaire, and DSM-5 eating disorder (ED) diagnoses were determined according to published guidelines. Pearson correlation coefficients, independent samples t-tests, chi super(2) tests, 1-way ANOVA's, and ANCOVA's were calculated. Results All PE measures correlated highly with one another (P<0.001). Participants with EDs scored higher on all measures than those without (P<0.001), and those with bulimia nervosa had the highest scores. Participants with PE and an accompanying ED (secondary PE) scored higher than those with PE and no ED symptoms (primary ED) on the CET (P<0.002) and ESDOCS (P<0.003). Correlations between EDE-Q and PE scores were stronger among women than men. PE prevalence was 6.4% (1.4% primary PE, 5.0% secondary PE) in our heterogeneous sample. Discussion Secondary PE appears to be more compulsive while primary PE is more addictive in nature. Men and women are equally at risk for PE, but in men it is more often primary and addictive and in women it is more often secondary and compulsive. (Int J Eat Disord 2016; 49:778-792) OBJECTIVEThere is disagreement about the conceptualization and measurement of pathological exercise (PE). This study seeks to elucidate the nature of this phenomenon as addictive or compulsive in its primary and secondary forms.METHOD1,497 adults (608 men, 885 women, 4 other) completed a set of validated surveys, including the Godin Leisure-Time Exercise Questionnaire, the Exercise Dependence Scale-21, the Exercise Addiction Inventory, the Compulsive Exercise Test (CET), the Obligatory Exercise Questionnaire, the Commitment to Exercise Scale, and an exercise specific adaptation of the Dimensional Obsessive-Compulsive Scale (ESDOCS). Participants completed the Eating Disorders Examination Questionnaire, and DSM-5 eating disorder (ED) diagnoses were determined according to published guidelines. Pearson correlation coefficients, independent samples t-tests, χ(2) tests, 1-way ANOVA's, and ANCOVA's were calculated.RESULTSAll PE measures correlated highly with one another (P < 0.001). Participants with EDs scored higher on all measures than those without (P < 0.001), and those with bulimia nervosa had the highest scores. Participants with PE and an accompanying ED (secondary PE) scored higher than those with PE and no ED symptoms (primary ED) on the CET (P < 0.002) and ESDOCS (P < 0.003). Correlations between EDE-Q and PE scores were stronger among women than men. PE prevalence was 6.4% (1.4% primary PE, 5.0% secondary PE) in our heterogeneous sample.DISCUSSIONSecondary PE appears to be more compulsive while primary PE is more addictive in nature. Men and women are equally at risk for PE, but in men it is more often primary and addictive and in women it is more often secondary and compulsive. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. (Int J Eat Disord 2016; 49:778-792). There is disagreement about the conceptualization and measurement of pathological exercise (PE). This study seeks to elucidate the nature of this phenomenon as addictive or compulsive in its primary and secondary forms. 1,497 adults (608 men, 885 women, 4 other) completed a set of validated surveys, including the Godin Leisure-Time Exercise Questionnaire, the Exercise Dependence Scale-21, the Exercise Addiction Inventory, the Compulsive Exercise Test (CET), the Obligatory Exercise Questionnaire, the Commitment to Exercise Scale, and an exercise specific adaptation of the Dimensional Obsessive-Compulsive Scale (ESDOCS). Participants completed the Eating Disorders Examination Questionnaire, and DSM-5 eating disorder (ED) diagnoses were determined according to published guidelines. Pearson correlation coefficients, independent samples t-tests, χ(2) tests, 1-way ANOVA's, and ANCOVA's were calculated. All PE measures correlated highly with one another (P < 0.001). Participants with EDs scored higher on all measures than those without (P < 0.001), and those with bulimia nervosa had the highest scores. Participants with PE and an accompanying ED (secondary PE) scored higher than those with PE and no ED symptoms (primary ED) on the CET (P < 0.002) and ESDOCS (P < 0.003). Correlations between EDE-Q and PE scores were stronger among women than men. PE prevalence was 6.4% (1.4% primary PE, 5.0% secondary PE) in our heterogeneous sample. Secondary PE appears to be more compulsive while primary PE is more addictive in nature. Men and women are equally at risk for PE, but in men it is more often primary and addictive and in women it is more often secondary and compulsive. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. (Int J Eat Disord 2016; 49:778-792). Objective There is disagreement about the conceptualization and measurement of pathological exercise (PE). This study seeks to elucidate the nature of this phenomenon as addictive or compulsive in its primary and secondary forms. Method 1,497 adults (608 men, 885 women, 4 other) completed a set of validated surveys, including the Godin Leisure-Time Exercise Questionnaire, the Exercise Dependence Scale-21, the Exercise Addiction Inventory, the Compulsive Exercise Test (CET), the Obligatory Exercise Questionnaire, the Commitment to Exercise Scale, and an exercise specific adaptation of the Dimensional Obsessive-Compulsive Scale (ESDOCS). Participants completed the Eating Disorders Examination Questionnaire, and DSM-5 eating disorder (ED) diagnoses were determined according to published guidelines. Pearson correlation coefficients, independent samples t-tests, χ2 tests, 1-way ANOVA's, and ANCOVA's were calculated. Results All PE measures correlated highly with one another (P<0.001). Participants with EDs scored higher on all measures than those without (P<0.001), and those with bulimia nervosa had the highest scores. Participants with PE and an accompanying ED (secondary PE) scored higher than those with PE and no ED symptoms (primary ED) on the CET (P<0.002) and ESDOCS (P<0.003). Correlations between EDE-Q and PE scores were stronger among women than men. PE prevalence was 6.4% (1.4% primary PE, 5.0% secondary PE) in our heterogeneous sample. Discussion Secondary PE appears to be more compulsive while primary PE is more addictive in nature. Men and women are equally at risk for PE, but in men it is more often primary and addictive and in women it is more often secondary and compulsive. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. (Int J Eat Disord 2016; 49:778-792) |
Author | Brewerton, Timothy D. Pearman III, Silas Cunningham, Hayley E. |
Author_xml | – sequence: 1 givenname: Hayley E. surname: Cunningham fullname: Cunningham, Hayley E. organization: Furman University, Department of Health Sciences, Greenville, South Carolina, 29613 – sequence: 2 givenname: Silas surname: Pearman III fullname: Pearman III, Silas organization: Furman University, Department of Health Sciences, Greenville, South Carolina, 29613 – sequence: 3 givenname: Timothy D. surname: Brewerton fullname: Brewerton, Timothy D. email: drtimothybrewerton@gmail.com organization: Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Medical University of South Carolina, South Carolina, 29425, Charleston |
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There is disagreement about the conceptualization and measurement of pathological exercise (PE). This study seeks to elucidate the nature of... There is disagreement about the conceptualization and measurement of pathological exercise (PE). This study seeks to elucidate the nature of this phenomenon as... Objective There is disagreement about the conceptualization and measurement of pathological exercise (PE). This study seeks to elucidate the nature of this... OBJECTIVEThere is disagreement about the conceptualization and measurement of pathological exercise (PE). This study seeks to elucidate the nature of this... |
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SubjectTerms | addiction Adolescent Adult Aged Analysis of Variance anorexia nervosa Anorexia Nervosa - diagnosis Anorexia Nervosa - psychology Athletes - psychology Behavior, Addictive - psychology Bulimia bulimia nervosa Bulimia Nervosa - diagnosis compulsion Compulsive Behavior - psychology compulsive exercise Eating disorders Exercise Exercise - psychology exercise addiction Female Humans Leisure Activities Male Middle Aged Neuroses obligatory exercise Pathology Prevalence Questionnaires Surveys and Questionnaires Women Young Adult |
Title | Conceptualizing primary and secondary pathological exercise using available measures of excessive exercise |
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