posted on 2024-08-09, 01:33authored byNora Trompeter
<p>Emotion dysregulation refers to difficulties individuals experience controlling and processing their emotional experiences. Such difficulties are linked to a range of mental disorders, including eating disorders. Adolescence is a key developmental period that is characterised by both more intense emotional experiences and increased eating disorder symptoms, positioning emotion dysregulation as a transdiagnostic factor in the development and maintenance of eating pathology. <strong>Study one </strong>reviews how research on emotion dysregulation prior to this thesis fits within the CBT-E model and provides avenues for future research regarding the interplay of emotion dysregulation and eating disorder pathology. <strong>Study two </strong>examines how adolescents in treatment for an eating disorder report more severe eating disorder symptoms compared to adolescents not receiving treatment, despite similar levels of general psychological distress. <strong>Study three </strong>focuses on differences in associations between eating disorder diagnostic groups and emotion dysregulation domains among high school students. Findings showed that emotion dysregulation is particularly related to binge eating and fasting, and evident across diagnostic groups. <strong>Study four </strong>examines whether emotion dysregulation and weight and shape concerns interact in their association with concurrent eating disorder behaviours. While it was hypothesised that emotion dysregulation would amplify the role of weight and shape concerns in predicting eating pathology, there was no evidence for moderation; rather, both these factors had additive relationships with eating disorder behaviours. <strong>Study five </strong>extends this finding longitudinally to show that emotion dysregulation predicted an increased probability of engaging in binge eating and fasting one year later, controlling for weight and shape concerns. Collectively, these studies indicate that emotion dysregulation is a key transdiagnostic factor in eating pathology among adolescents that is implicated in both the onset and maintenance of these problems.</p>
Funding
Australian Government Research Training Program (RTP) Scholarship
Chapter 1. General introduction -- Chapter 2. Emotion dysregulation within the CBT-E model of eating disorders: a narrative review -- Chapter 3. Differences between Australian adolescents with eating disorder symptoms who are in treatment or not in treatment for an eating disorder -- Chapter 4. Emotion dysregulation across the span of eating disorder symptoms: findings from a community sample of adolescents -- Chapter 5. Emotion dysregulation and eating disorder symptoms: examining distinct associations and interactions in adolescents -- Chapter 6: Emotion dysregulation and weight/shape concerns as predictors of eating disorder behaviours among adolescents -- Chapter 7: General discussion -- References -- Appendix A: Authorship contribution statements -- Appendix B: Ethics approvals -- Appendix C: Measures & diagnostic criteria (adapted from Mitchison et al. (2019) and Trompeter et al. (2019)) -- Appendix D: Published papers -- Appendix E: Supplementary materials -- Appendix F: Invited chapter “Epidemiology of eating disorders in boys and men”
Notes
Thesis by publication
Awarding Institution
Macquarie University
Degree Type
Thesis PhD
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy
Department, Centre or School
School of Psychological Sciences
Year of Award
2022
Principal Supervisor
Kate Bussey
Additional Supervisor 1
Deborah Mitchison
Additional Supervisor 2
Miriam Forbes
Rights
Copyright: The Author
Copyright disclaimer: https://www.mq.edu.au/copyright-disclaimer