[Shame, guilt and social anxiety in obesity with binge-eating disorder].

Christina Albohn-Kühne, Winfried Rief
Author Information
  1. Christina Albohn-Kühne: Christoph-Dornier Stiftung für Klinische Psychologie , Marburg. albohn@gmx.de

Abstract

Binge-eating disorder (BED) is the most common eating disorder found in obese people. The present study compared 89 obese participants with and without BED in terms of eating-, weight- and body related shame and guilt and their association to self-esteem and social anxiety. The results illustrated that obese people with BED reported higher scores in disorder specific shame and guilt, except feeling shame about their weight and their body; they suffered from lower self-esteem than obese without BED. The results confirmed that self-esteem is a significant statistical predictor of feeling shame. Furthermore obese with BED suffered from social phobia more frequently. The results emphasized the need to consider feelings of shame and guilt and the importance of social anxiety in prevention and therapy of obesity.

MeSH Term

Adolescent
Adult
Anxiety
Binge-Eating Disorder
Body Image
Body Mass Index
Female
Guilt
Humans
Male
Middle Aged
Obesity
Phobic Disorders
Self Concept
Shame
Young Adult

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0BEDobeseshameguiltsocialdisorderself-esteemanxietyresultspeoplewithoutbodyfeelingsufferedobesityBinge-eatingcommoneatingfoundpresentstudycompared89participantstermseating-weight-relatedassociationillustratedreportedhigherscoresspecificexceptweightlowerconfirmedsignificantstatisticalpredictorFurthermorephobiafrequentlyemphasizedneedconsiderfeelingsimportancepreventiontherapy[Shamebinge-eatingdisorder]

Similar Articles

Cited By