Dealing with Food Addiction | Futures Luxury Rehab in Florida
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What Is a Food Addiction?

November 14, 2025 | By: Dr. Tammy Malloy

Food addiction, also known as binge eating disorder or compulsive overeating, describes a behavioral pattern in which individuals compulsively consume food despite negative consequences. This condition shares many similarities with substance use disorders because the same reward circuits in the brain are activated during compulsive eating. Understanding this connection is the first step in dealing with food addiction in a healthy and sustainable way.

When someone eats certain foods, dopamine is released, producing pleasure and reinforcing the behavior. Over time, this cycle creates dependency and loss of control. At Futures Recovery Healthcare, a luxury rehab in Florida, clinicians often see how food addiction reflects a deep emotional struggle rather than a lack of willpower. Understanding this connection is the first step in dealing with food addiction in a healthy and sustainable way.

Understanding Hyperpalatable Foods

Researchers have found that certain types of food can trigger addictive responses. These are known as hyperpalatable foods, highly processed items rich in sugar, fat, and salt that overstimulate the brain’s reward system Common examples include:

Regular exposure to these foods can reduce the brain’s sensitivity to dopamine, leading to tolerance and cravings. Studies from Yale University show that these neural changes mirror what occurs in substance dependence. For individuals dealing with food addiction, these biological effects make moderation particularly difficult, especially when emotional triggers are also involved.

How Food Addiction Relates to Other Addictions

Food addiction shares psychological and physiological similarities with alcohol and drug addiction. Both can produce cravings, withdrawal, and compulsive behaviors. The brain regions involved in reward, motivation, and self-control overlap significantly. Dopamine release from eating hyperpalatable foods reinforces the urge to consume more, similar to substance dependence.

Emotional consequences also align closely. People may feel guilt, shame, or frustration after binge episodes, which can perpetuate the cycle of overeating. These emotions often mirror what clients experience when recovering from drugs or alcohol.

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At the CORE program at Futures Recovery Healthcare, clients receive integrated dual-diagnosis treatment that recognizes these overlaps. The program combines medical, psychological, and behavioral therapies to help individuals manage both compulsive eating and underlying emotional conditions such as depression, anxiety, or trauma.

Who Is Most at Risk?

Although anyone can develop a dependency on food, some individuals face higher risk factors. Research from the National Institutes of Health links anxiety, depression, and unresolved trauma to higher rates of compulsive overeating. People with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) are twice as likely to experience food addiction compared to those without trauma history.

Other contributing factors include:

For many, dealing with food addiction means addressing both emotional and biological drivers. Without treating the underlying causes, such as trauma or mental health conditions, long-term recovery becomes difficult to maintain.

Recognizing the Symptoms

While food addiction is not formally listed in the DSM-5, clinicians often use substance use disorder criteria to identify it. The Yale Food Addiction Scale, developed by psychologist Ashley Gearhardt, is also used to evaluate severity and patterns of compulsive eating.

Common symptoms include:

Many of these symptoms overlap with those seen in drug or alcohol addiction. Recognizing them early helps individuals seek support before the behavior becomes deeply ingrained.

Food Addiction vs. Eating Disorders

Food addiction and eating disorders share similarities but represent distinct conditions. Food addiction focuses on neurochemical dependency, how the brain reacts to hyperpalatable foods while eating disorders involve complex psychological and behavioral components such as body image distortion or fear of weight gain.

Someone with food addiction may eat compulsively to achieve pleasure or emotional relief. Someone with bulimia nervosa or anorexia nervosa may restrict or purge due to self-perception or anxiety. Though they can coexist, treatments differ. Addressing both requires clinical expertise, compassionate care, and structured behavioral therapy.

At Futures, clinicians often help clients differentiate between these experiences to ensure that care plans address every contributing factor. This clarity supports progress for those actively dealing with food addiction alongside co-occurring conditions.

Effective Ways to Begin Dealing with Food Addiction

The most effective strategies combine medical, psychological, and behavioral therapies. Just as with substance use treatment, recovery from food addiction requires structure, accountability, and support.

Therapeutic approaches may include:

The CORE program at Futures incorporates these elements within a comprehensive treatment model. Clients receive personalized therapy, medical monitoring, and holistic wellness services, including mindfulness, yoga, and nutrition education. This integrated care model is central to dealing with food addiction effectively and sustainably.

Building Long-Term Recovery

Overcoming food addiction requires ongoing attention to emotional health and daily habits. After treatment, maintaining structure through aftercare, therapy, or peer support groups like Food Addicts Anonymous helps prevent relapse. These groups, modeled after the 12-Step approach, provide community and accountability, two key components for sustained progress.

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At Futures Recovery Healthcare, a luxury rehab in Florida, clinicians support clients throughout this process. Whether through structured aftercare or specialized outpatient programs, the focus remains on helping individuals restore balance, rebuild self-esteem, and maintain physical and mental wellness.

Recovery means more than avoiding triggers. It involves reshaping one’s relationship with food, developing emotional resilience, and learning to self-regulate in healthy ways. Every small step toward awareness and self-compassion is progress.

The Path Forward

For those struggling or supporting a loved one, dealing with food addiction can feel overwhelming but help exists. Recognizing that food addiction involves real neurobiological changes, not personal weakness, is vital. With evidence-based care and compassionate guidance, recovery is possible.At Futures Recovery Healthcare, a luxury rehab in Florida, clients receive individualized, trauma-informed treatment to address both compulsive behaviors and their underlying causes. Through programs like CORE, Futures provides a supportive environment designed to promote lasting recovery, physical health, and emotional balance.

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Tammy Malloy, PhD, LCSW, CSAT

Chief Executive Officer

Dr. Tammy Malloy holds a PhD in Social Work from Barry University and is a Licensed Clinical Social Worker (LCSW) as well as a Certified Sex Addiction Therapist (CSAT). With over 20 years of experience in behavioral health, Dr. Malloy specializes in trauma-informed care, family systems, and high-risk behaviors encompassing all addictive disorders.

She has extensive expertise in psychometric assessments for clinical outcomes and diagnosis, with a recent focus on integrating AI technologies into mental health care.

Dr. Malloy is a published researcher, contributing to academic journals on addiction, depression, spirituality, and clinical personality pathology, and has facilitated research for more than a decade. She is a sought-after speaker, presenting at national and international conferences on substance use disorders, co-occurring mental health conditions, and high-risk sexual behaviors.

Passionate about advancing the field, Dr. Malloy is dedicated to teaching, empowering others, and improving quality of life for patients and staff alike.

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