自我同情与身体羞耻感:观察从身体监控到饮食失调症状的不同途径

Q3 Psychology
Marco Cannavò , Stefania Cella , Janine Gullo , Nadia Barberis
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引用次数: 0

摘要

导言:进食障碍包括与对体形、体重和食物消耗量的担忧有关的各种症状,经常表现为限制性进食、暴饮暴食和清食等行为。身体监控和身体羞耻感一直与这些心理病态的严重程度相关,而自我同情则被认为是这些病症的保护因素。本研究旨在验证以下假设:较高的身体监控与进食障碍症状的增加之间存在关系,并研究自我同情和身体羞耻感是否可能成为这种关系的中介。研究方法:对 386 名新成人(M=26.11;DS=4.29)进行问卷调查,以评估身体监控、自我同情、身体羞耻感和进食障碍症状。结果身体监控与自我同情呈负相关,而与身体羞耻感和进食障碍呈正相关。此外,还发现自我同情、身体羞耻感和进食障碍之间存在负相关。此外,身体羞耻感与进食障碍之间存在正相关。结论:这些结果表明,适应不良的饮食模式可能与身体监视和身体羞耻感有关,而自我同情则可能是防止这些适应不良态度的保护因素。本文深入探讨了该研究对临床医生的影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Self-compassion and body shame: Observing different pathways from body surveillance to eating disorders symptoms

Introduction

Eating disorders include a variety of symptoms related to concerns about body shape, weight, and food consumption, frequently manifesting as behaviors like restrictive eating, binge eating, and purging. Body surveillance and body shame have consistently been associated with the severity of these psychopathologies, while self-compassion has been suggested as a protective factor against these conditions. This study aims to test the hypothesis that there is a relationship between higher body surveillance and increased eating disorder symptoms, and to investigate whether self-compassion and body shame may act as mediators of this relationship.

Methods

Questionnaires were administered to 386 emerging adults (M = 26.11; DS=4.29) to assess Body Surveillance, Self-compassion, Body Shame, and Eating disorders symptoms.

Results

Body Surveillance is negatively linked with Self-Compassion, while positively correlated with Body Shame and Eating Disorders. Furthermore, negative correlations were found between Self-Compassion, Body Shame, and Eating Disorders. Moreover, there was a positive correlation between Body Shame and Eating Disorders. In addition, a statistically significant indirect association was found from Body Surveillance to Eating disorders symptoms by Body Shame, and from Self-compassion to Eating disorders symptoms by Body Shame.

Conclusion

These results suggest that maladaptive eating patterns may be associated with Body Surveillance and Body Shame, while Self-compassion may serve as a protective factor against these maladaptive attitudes. The implications for clinicians are thoroughly discussed.

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来源期刊
Journal of Affective Disorders Reports
Journal of Affective Disorders Reports Psychology-Clinical Psychology
CiteScore
3.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
137
审稿时长
134 days
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