Publication | Closed Access
Dietary Restraint, Body Dissatisfaction, and Psychological Distress: A Prospective Analysis.
621
Citations
42
References
2005
Year
NutritionHealth PsychologyMental HealthBulimia NervosaPsychologyObesityBody CompositionEating DisordersPublic HealthBody DissatisfactionAnorexia NervosaAppetite ControlHealth SciencesPsychiatryProspective DataClinical NutritionObesity ManagementBinge EatingDietary RestraintDietary TherapyChildhood ObesityBody ImageMedicineDietary Health
This study uses prospective data from a survey of 1,177 adolescent girls to examine whether emotional eating, binge eating, abnormal attitudes to eating and weight, low self-esteem, stress, and depression are associated with dietary restraint or body dissatisfaction. In analyses that included both restraint and body dissatisfaction as independent predictors, restraint was associated only with more negative attitudes to eating, whereas body dissatisfaction was significantly associated with all the adverse outcomes. These results cast doubt on the proposition that restrained eating is a primary cause of bulimic symptoms, emotional eating, and psychological distress seen in individuals who are trying to control their weight, and rather suggest that body dissatisfaction is the key factor.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1