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Stress and Health 2020-Sep

Stress coping strategies and stress reactivity in adolescents with overweight/obesity

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Tiwaloluwa Ajibewa
Tessa Adams
Amaanat Gill
Lauren Mazin
Julia Gerras
Rebecca Hasson

Keywords

Abstract

This study explored the associations between the frequency and effectiveness of habitual stress coping strategies on physiological and psychological stress responses to an acute laboratory stressor in adolescents with overweight/obesity (51 adolescents; 47% female; ages 14-19 years). Coping strategies were assessed using the Schoolager's Coping Strategies Inventory. Acute physiological stress responses were measured as salivary cortisol and α-amylase output during the Trier Social Stress Test (TSST) and during a control condition. Acute psychological stress was measured using a Likert-type scale, and systolic blood pressure (SBP) and heart rate (HR) were measured at baseline. Results revealed that higher coping effectiveness was associated with lower log-based α-amylase during the stress (β= -0.025, p=0.018) and control (β= -0.030, p=0.005) conditions, but not with cortisol across either condition (all ps>0.05). SBP moderated the association between coping effectiveness and α-amylase during the stress condition, with higher coping effectiveness associated with lower α-amylase only among individuals with lower SBP (β=0.002, p=0.027). Coping frequency was not associated with cortisol responses, neither was habitual stress coping strategies associated with psychological stress (all ps>0.05). These findings provide preliminary evidence that effective use of stress coping strategies may provide a dampening effect on sympathetic activity in an at-risk adolescent population. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.

Keywords: Stress reactivity; alpha-amylase; coping; cortisol; overweight/obesity.

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