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A two-factor model of disordered eating.

L McLaren1, L Gauvin, H Steiger

  • 1Department of Social and Preventive Medicine and Groupe de recherche interdisciplinaire en santé, University of Montréal, P.O. Box 6128, Downtown Station, Montréal, QC, Canada H3C 3J7. northernwish@hotmail.com

Eating Behaviors
|March 6, 2004
PubMed
Summary
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General psychopathology and body esteem significantly predict eating disorders. Their interaction, alongside personality traits like narcissism, increases eating disorder risk, highlighting a vulnerability factor.

Area of Science:

  • Psychology
  • Psychiatry
  • Clinical Psychology

Background:

  • General psychopathology, including personality disturbance and mood dysregulation, is prevalent in eating disorder (ED) patients.
  • Understanding the interplay between general and eating-specific psychopathology is crucial for ED etiology.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To examine a two-factor model of disordered eating.
  • To investigate the independent and interactive contributions of general psychopathology (personality) and eating-related psychopathology (body esteem) to deviant eating patterns.

Main Methods:

  • Employed K-means cluster analysis to categorize 266 nonclinical female students into deviant eaters, restrainers, and nondeviant eaters.
  • Classified 76 clinically diagnosed ED patients as a separate cluster.

Related Experiment Videos

  • Utilized multinomial logistic regression to assess the predictive power of body esteem, personality pathology, and their interactions on cluster membership.
  • Main Results:

    • Identified three distinct clusters among nonclinical participants and a clinical ED cluster.
    • Found significant main effects for body esteem and personality pathology.
    • Observed marginally significant interactions between body esteem facets (appearance, weight, attribution) and personality traits (narcissism, stimulus seeking).

    Conclusions:

    • The co-occurrence of low body esteem and maladaptive personality traits significantly contributes to eating disorder development.
    • The interaction between these factors appears more critical than their independent effects.
    • General psychopathology may act as a vulnerability factor in the etiology of eating disorders.