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Food Addiction Treatment in Lakeland, Florida. Both in- person or telehealth appointments available for the state of Florida.

Many people struggling with food addiction describe a painful cycle: intense cravings, loss of control, guilt, and a promise to “do better tomorrow.” Yet this cycle isn’t simply about willpower. Research now shows that for some individuals, food addiction is a valid neurobiological and psychological condition—one that deserves understanding and compassionate, evidence-based treatment.

At CareSync Psych, we help patients recognize that food addiction is not a moral failure—it’s a complex interaction between the brain, body, and emotional regulation systems.

Book an Appointment

 


 

Is Food Addiction Real?

The concept of “food addiction” has been debated for years. However, growing evidence supports that highly palatable foods—especially those rich in sugar, fat, and salt—can activate the same neural reward pathways as drugs of abuse.

 

    • According to Gordon et al. (2018), a systematic review and found strong evidence linking addictive-like eating patterns to the dopamine-driven reward system seen in substance use disorders.
    • Fletcher & Kenny (2018) concluded that food addiction shares behavioral, neurochemical, and genetic overlaps with traditional addictions.
    • Davis (2013) also discussed that binge eating disorder (BED) and food addiction share common features such as loss of control, tolerance, and withdrawal symptoms.

 

In other words, the brain can become “hooked” on certain foods in much the same way it becomes hooked on drugs—especially ultra-processed foods that hijack our reward system.

 


 

The Brain–Body Mechanisms Behind Food Addiction

 

1. Dopamine Dysregulation in Food Addiction

When we eat hyperpalatable foods, the brain releases a surge of dopamine in the nucleus accumbens—the same reward area activated by drugs like cocaine or opioids. Over time, the brain may require more of that stimulus to achieve the same pleasure, leading to cravings and compulsive eating.

 

2. Stress and Cortisol‘

Chronic stress triggers cortisol, increasing appetite and preference for “comfort foods.” This stress-eating loop reinforces emotional dependency on food as a coping mechanism.

 

3. Insulin and Leptin Resistance

Biological changes in metabolism, especially insulin resistance, blunt hunger and satiety cues, making it harder to regulate intake. The body craves quick energy even when it doesn’t need it.

 

4. Gut–Brain Axis

Emerging evidence suggests gut microbiome imbalances can alter neurotransmitter production and cravings—linking digestion, emotion, and appetite regulation in a powerful feedback loop.

 


 

The Emotional and Mental Health Connection

Food addiction rarely exists in isolation. It’s often intertwined with anxiety, depression, trauma, and obsessive-compulsive tendencies.

 

    • Many people use food for emotional regulation—to numb, soothe, or escape discomfort.
    • Feelings of shame and guilt after overeating can trigger further stress, fueling another cycle of bingeing.
    • Early life adversity and attachment disruptions may increase vulnerability by altering stress responses and reward sensitivity.

 

As Davis (2013) describes, these overlapping mechanisms mean that treating food addiction requires addressing both biological and psychological roots.

 


 

Why We Feel “Out of Control” & Why Food Addiction is Real

When people say, “I know I shouldn’t eat it, but I can’t stop myself,” they are describing the very essence of addiction—a disconnect between intention and behavior. This sense of loss of control comes from changes in the brain’s prefrontal cortex, the region responsible for decision-making and impulse control.

Repeated exposure to addictive foods dulls this region’s inhibitory capacity, while the limbic system (reward/emotion) becomes more dominant. The result: even when we consciously want to stop, our neurobiology keeps pushing us toward the next “fix.”

 


 

Healing Through Understanding and Integration

At CareSync Psych, we approach food addiction through the lens of metabolic psychiatry and compassionate behavioral therapy. Healing begins by syncing the mind and body.

 

Our approach includes:

 

    • Psychotherapy and Mindfulness-Based Interventions to explore emotional triggers, perfectionism, and shame.
    • Metabolic and Nutritional Assessment to stabilize blood sugar, reduce inflammation, and restore neurotransmitter balance.
    • Medication-Assisted and Supplement Support (when indicated) targeting dopamine or serotonin pathways.
    • Lifestyle and Behavioral Strategies including stress management, movement, and restorative sleep to reset the body’s reward systems.

 

Home

Recovery isn’t about deprivation—it’s about reclaiming control, reconnecting with internal hunger and fullness cues, and healing the relationship with both food and self.

 


 

The Takeaway

Food addiction is not a weakness—it’s a neurobiological reality rooted in survival mechanisms that have been hijacked by modern food environments. Understanding it as both a mental health and metabolic issue allows for deeper compassion and more effective treatment.

At CareSync Psych, we believe recovery begins when you stop blaming yourself and start treating both your brain chemistry and emotional wounds together—because healing happens when mind and body finally sync.

 


📖 References

 

    • Gordon, E. L., Ariel-Donges, A. H., Bauman, V., & Merlo, L. J. (2018). What is the evidence for “food addiction?” A systematic review. Nutrients, 10(4), 477. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu10040477
    • Fletcher, P. C., & Kenny, P. J. (2018). Food addiction: a valid concept? Neuropsychopharmacology, 43(13), 2506–2513. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41386-018-0203-9
    • Davis, C. (2013). Compulsive overeating as an addictive behavior: overlap between food addiction and binge eating disorder. Current Obesity Reports, 2(2), 171–178. https://doi.org/10.1007/s13679-013-0049-x

 

 

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Jennifer Sanri ARNP PMHNP-BC
Psychiatry

We are an outpatient mental health care provider committed to integrating evidence-based treatment with a holistic, healing-centered approach to promote mental wellness. Our patient-focused services include medication management, psychotherapy, metabolic psychiatry,  and wellness optimization.

“Providing compassionate mental health care by syncing the mind and body—treating the psychological with the physiological.”

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Jennifer Sanri ARNP PMHNP-BC

Psychiatry

At CareSync Psych, we honor every dimension of healing—biological, emotional, and spiritual.
We believe connection, compassion, and evidence-based medicine can coexist beautifully.

The CareSync Difference

Science meets Soul

Our mission is to help each individual sync mind and body to move beyond symptom management toward healing, self-actualization, and long-term wellness.

Why Choose CareSync Psych

  • Integrative and individualized care.

  • Evidence-based with compassionate delivery.

  • Rooted in lived experience and empathy.

  • Commitment to education and empowerment.

Therapy sessions that meet you where you are — not where you “should” be.

Evidence-Based Talk Therapy

  • Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT)

  • Exposure and Response Prevention (ERP)

  • Supportive Therapy

  • Interpersonal Therapy (IPT)

  • Mindfulness-Based Approaches

 

Founded on the principle that mental and physical health are inseparable.

  • Blends psychopharmacology, therapy, and metabolic psychiatry.

  • Individualized care rooted in self-experience, compassion, evidence, and holistic science.

Therapy sessions that meet you where you are — not where you “should” be.

Specialty Care Areas

Teens, Adults, and Older Adults

  • Anxiety Disorders & Panic Disorder

  • Depression & Mood Disorders

  • Obsessive–Compulsive Disorder (OCD)

  • Binge Eating & Food Addiction

  • ADHD

  • Trauma-Related Disorders

  • Sleep & Circadian Rhythm Disorders

Integrative Care Model

  • Psychiatry (Biological)

  • Psychotherapy (Psychological)

  • Nutrition + Lifestyle (Environmental & Metabolic)

All working together in sync to support sustainable mental health

Treating  the patient as a whole: – we consider psychological, physiological, social, and emotional factors. Accessible treatment – with in-person and HIPAA-compliant telehealth options.

Compassionate, Personalized Follow-Up

CareSync Psych emphasizes continuity of care — not symptom management, but transformation.

  • Regular progress assessments.

  • Medication and lifestyle adjustments.

  • Emotional and educational support at every visit.

CareSync Psych Approach

Integrated Care for Body and Mind

  • 🧠 Psychiatric Support: Targeted medication management to improve mood, energy, and focus.

  • 🌿 Metabolic Psychiatry: Address inflammation, nutrition, and metabolic imbalance impacting mental health.

  • 💬 Therapeutic Support: CBT, Supportive Therapy, and Acceptance-Based approaches for resilience and adjustment.

  • ❤️ Lifestyle Medicine: Nutrition, sleep, gentle movement, and mindfulness to improve quality of life.

Healing begins when we treat both the biology and the burden.

What makes CareSync Psych inclusive is not only the range of services but also our philosophy: to create a non-judgmental environment that patients feel safe, respected, and heard.

Chronic Illness & Mental Health

 When the Body Hurts, the Mind Responds


The Hidden Burden:
Living with chronic illness often brings persistent stress, uncertainty, and emotional fatigue.

  • Mind–Body Connection:
    Physical symptoms and inflammation can influence brain chemistry, increasing risk for anxiety, depression, and fatigue.

  • Cognitive Impact:
    Pain, medication side effects, and sleep disruption can alter concentration and memory, creating a cycle of frustration and hopelessness.

  • Social & Emotional Isolation:
    Ongoing symptoms can limit social life and work engagement—fostering shame or self-blame.


 

Patient-centered care: treatment plans are collaborative, built around your goals and values.

Metabolic Psychiatry & Lifestyle Interventions

Possible treatment Options: Nutrition & Ketogenic Interventions

  • Glucose/Ketone Monitoring

  • Sleep Optimization

  • Movement & Exercise Plans

  • Stress Management Techniques

  • Gut–Brain Health & Inflammation Control

“You cannot heal the mind without nurturing the body, nor heal the body without soothing the mind.”
— Jennifer Sanri, PMHNP-BC

Ready to Begin Your Journey?

Book an Appointment Today.

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