Reprint

Food Addiction and Eating Addiction

Scientific Advances and Their Clinical, Social and Policy Implications

Edited by
July 2020
178 pages
  • ISBN978-3-03936-358-2 (Hardback)
  • ISBN978-3-03936-359-9 (PDF)

This book is a reprint of the Special Issue Food Addiction and Eating Addiction: Scientific Advances and their Clinical, Social and Policy Implications that was published in

Medicine & Pharmacology
Public Health & Healthcare
Summary

There is a growing view that certain foods, particularly those high in refined sugars and fats, may be addictive and that some forms of obesity may be treated as food addictions. This is supported by an expanding body of evidence from animal studies, human neuroscience, and brain imaging. Obese and overweight individuals also display patterns of eating behavior that resemble the ways in which addicted individuals consume drugs. Scientific and clinical questions remain: Is addiction a valid explanation of excess weight? Is food addiction a behavioural (i.e., eating) or substance (i.e., sugar) addiction, or a complex interaction of both? Should obesity be treated as a food addiction? Should we distinguish food addiction from other forms of disordered eating like Binge Eating Disorder? It is also unclear what impact food addiction explanations might have on the way in which we think about or treat people who are overweight: What impact will a food addiction diagnosis have on individuals’ internalised weight-bias, stigma, and self-efficacy? Should some foods be regulated like other addictive commodities (i.e., alcohol and tobacco), whose advertising and sale is restricted, or like certain foods, which are taxed? This Special Issue addresses questions raised by the concept of food addiction.

Format
  • Hardback
License
© 2020 by the authors; CC BY-NC-ND license
Keywords
chocolate; Addiction Research Center Inventory; sugar; craving; addictive-like eating; eating behavior; food addiction; Japan; validation; Yale Food Addiction Scale 2.0; ethics; food addiction; health policy; stigma; Food addiction; Yale Food Addiction Scale; functional magnetic resonance imaging; basolateral amygdala; food addiction; irrational beliefs; emotional eating; anxiety; food misuse; food addiction; overeating; obesity; impulsivity; reward sensitivity; cognitive training; neuromodulation; food addiction; obesity; stigma; eating behavior; attitudes; food addiction; eating disorders; bulimia nervosa; binge eating disorders; obesity; other specified feeding or eating disorders; cluster analysis; diet; fat; food addiction; obesity; stigma; obesity; food addiction; weight bias; weight stigma; obesity prejudice reduction; n/a