Emotion regulation and the association between PTSD, diet, and exercise: a longitudinal evaluation among US military veterans

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Abstract

Background: Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is associated with premature onset of chronic health conditions such as cardiovascular disease. Diet and exercise are behavioural contributors to physical health, and research suggests they are influenced by psychiatric symptoms, including PTSD. Objectives: The aim of this study was to examine longitudinal associations between PTSD and exercise and diet quality and to test if emotion regulation strategies contribute to the link between PTSD and these health behaviours. Method: A representative sample of US military veterans (n = 860 at Time 1, n = 503 at Time 2, mean age = 63 years, 91.5% male) were assessed twice over the course of approximately three years. Results: Mediation models revealed that the association between baseline PTSD symptom severity and subsequent diet quality was mediated by emotion suppression (measured at Time 2; indirect B = −.03; 95% CI: −.059 to −.002). Trauma exposure also directly predicted diet quality (B = −.31; p = .003). There were no significant direct or indirect associations between PTSD severity or trauma exposure and exercise engagement. Conclusions: These results suggest that PTSD symptoms are associated with worse diet quality and that the consumption of unhealthy food may be driven by efforts to suppress emotion. This carries implications for understanding and treating medical comorbidities among those with traumatic stress.

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Escarfulleri, S., Ellickson-Larew, S., Fein-Schaffer, D., Mitchell, K. S., & Wolf, E. J. (2021). Emotion regulation and the association between PTSD, diet, and exercise: a longitudinal evaluation among US military veterans. European Journal of Psychotraumatology, 12(1). https://doi.org/10.1080/20008198.2021.1895515

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