Prevalence of the Risk of Exercise Addiction Based on a New Classification: A Cross-Sectional Study in 15 Countries
Bhavya Chhabra
Attila Szabo
Umberto Granziol
Thomas Zandonai
Emilio Landolfi
Marco Solmi
Liye Zou
Peiying Yang
Mia Beck Lichtenstein
Oliver Stoll
Mark D. Griffiths
Takayuki Akimoto
Abril Cantù-Berrueto
Angelica Larios
Ricardo de la Vega Marcos
Merve Alpay
Merve Denizci Nazlıgül
Mustafa Yildirim
Mike Trott
Robert M. Portman
Aleksei Y. Egorov
Publication Name: International Journal of Mental Health and Addiction
Publication Date: 2024-01-01
Volume: Unknown
Issue: Unknown
Page Range: Unknown
Description:
Exercise addiction is widely studied, but an official clinical diagnosis does not exist for this behavioral addiction. Earlier research using various screening instruments examined the absolute scale values while investigating the disorder. The Exercise Addiction Inventory-3 (EAI-3) was recently developed with two subscales, one denoting health-relevant exercise and the other addictive tendencies. The latter has different cutoff values for leisure exercisers and elite athletes. Therefore, the present 15-country study (n = 3,760) used the EAI-3 to classify the risk of exercise addiction (REA), but only if the participant reported having had a negative exercise-related experience. Based on this classification, the prevalence of REA was 9.5% in the sample. No sex differences, and few cross-national differences were found. However, collectivist countries reported greater REA in various exercise contexts than individualist countries. Moreover, the REA among athletes was (i) twice as high as leisure exercisers, (ii) higher in organized than self-planned exercises, irrespective of athletic status, and (iii) higher among those who exercised for skill/mastery reasons than for health and social reasons, again irrespective of athletic status. Eating disorders were more frequent among REA-affected individuals than in the rest of the sample. These results do not align with recent theoretical arguments claiming that exercise addiction is unlikely to be fostered in organized sports. The present study questions the current research framework for understanding exercise addiction and offers a new alternative to segregate self-harming exercise from passionate overindulgence in athletic life.
Open Access: Yes
Authors - 21
Bhavya Chhabra
58873274300
Attila Szabo
8719927800
Umberto Granziol
57194214827
Thomas Zandonai
56712839600
Emilio Landolfi
55587320600
Marco Solmi
6507233742
Liye Zou
57192235862
Peiying Yang
57355897400
Mia Beck Lichtenstein
55063126200
Oliver Stoll
6603794771
Mark D. Griffiths
58833736600
Takayuki Akimoto
7101694671
Abril Cantù-Berrueto
57188980455
Angelica Larios
59167712700
Ricardo de la Vega Marcos
26665980700
Merve Alpay
58246288100
Merve Denizci Nazlıgül
57208131116
Mustafa Yildirim
59168477700
Mike Trott
57212660197
Robert M. Portman
57201093029
Aleksei Y. Egorov
57542535500