Coping, escapism, and fantasy motives and depression symptoms mediate the relationship between emotion dysregulation and gaming disorder
Christian Bäcklund, Daniel Eriksson Sörman, Hanna M. Gavelin, Orsolya Király, Zsolt Demetrovics, Jessica K. Ljungberg

TL;DR
The study finds that depression and escapism motives help explain how poor emotion control leads to gaming disorder, with differences between WHO and APA frameworks.
Contribution
This study identifies serial mediation effects of depression and coping/escapism motives on gaming disorder symptoms, comparing WHO and APA diagnostic frameworks.
Findings
Depression and coping/escapism motives fully mediate emotion dysregulation and gaming disorder in the WHO framework.
The same factors partially mediate the relationship in the APA framework.
Emotion dysregulation and depression are linked to gaming disorder through escapism motives.
Abstract
•The emotion dysregulation and GD symptoms relation was positive and significant.•In the WHO model, depression and CEF motives fully mediated the relation.•In the APA model, depression and CEF motives partially mediated the relation. The emotion dysregulation and GD symptoms relation was positive and significant. In the WHO model, depression and CEF motives fully mediated the relation. In the APA model, depression and CEF motives partially mediated the relation. Studies have shown that emotion dysregulation, depression symptoms, and escapism motives are associated with Gaming Disorder (GD) symptoms. Findings indicate a discrepancy between the World Health Organization (WHO) and the American Psychiatric Association (APA) GD symptoms frameworks. The current study aimed to investigate the serial mediating effect of depression symptoms and coping, escapism and fantasy motives on the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsImpact of Technology on Adolescents · Digital Mental Health Interventions · Personality Disorders and Psychopathology
