Abstract

The worldwide spread of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) and the resulting lockdown has affected the whole world and the maintenance of healthy eating behavior might be an additional challenge. Self-compassion (SC) interventions emphasize not only treating oneself in a caring way regarding personal weaknesses, e.g., diet lapses, but also the recognition of shared human suffering. Thus, self-compassion might be particularly valuable during the current worldwide crisis due to COVID-19. In this study, N = 65 participants that wanted to lose weight or develop a healthier eating behavior were randomized to either a 14-day self-compassion intervention arm or a waitlist control arm. The intervention consisted of daily journaling exercises and meditations via smartphone with a focus on improving eating behavior. Before and after the intervention phase, questionnaires on self-compassion, eating, dieting, health behavior, stress, and emotion regulation were completed and body weight was determined. Participants in the treatment arm (n = 28) showed an increase in self-compassion, a decrease in perceived stress, eating in response to feeling anxious, and, on trend level, body mass index (BMI). Changes in self-compassion fully mediated changes in stress. No such effects were found in the waitlist control group (n = 29). Thus, self-compassion might help to maintain well-being and healthy eating habits in times of increased stress and isolation. Future studies should replicate these findings outside of the COVID-19 crisis and test the effect of self-compassion in samples with eating disorders or weight problems.

Highlights

  • At the beginning of 2020, governments all over the world passed laws to curb the spread of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), caused by the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2)

  • For the second and third hypothesis, we explored whether changes in self-compassion mediate possible changes in stress, eating behavior, and body mass index (BMI) and if this relation was different between the two groups

  • Post hoc tests showed that SC in the intervention group (IG) was higher after completing the intervention, t(27) = −3.10, p = 0.004, while it did not change in the waitlist group (WG), t(28) = −0.32, p = 0.754

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Summary

Introduction

At the beginning of 2020, governments all over the world passed laws to curb the spread of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), caused by the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2). This new virus is highly contagious and became a global pandemic within weeks. In healthy adults, fatal cases with respiratory or cardiac failure as a frequent cause of death occurred (Beeching et al, 2020). During the peak of daily infections and deaths, more than half of the world population was on some sort of lockdown (Sandford, 2020)

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