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. 2015 Aug:18:36-40.
doi: 10.1016/j.eatbeh.2015.03.011. Epub 2015 Mar 28.

Attachment style and emotional eating in bariatric surgery candidates: The mediating role of difficulties in emotion regulation

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Attachment style and emotional eating in bariatric surgery candidates: The mediating role of difficulties in emotion regulation

Marlene Taube-Schiff et al. Eat Behav. 2015 Aug.

Abstract

Objective: Difficulties with emotion regulation is a hypothesized mechanism through which attachment insecurity may affect emotional eating. No studies have yet investigated this effect in the bariatric population. Because many obese individuals engage in emotional eating, difficulty regulating emotion may be an important underlying mechanism through which attachment insecurity is linked to emotional eating in bariatric surgery candidates.

Methods: In this cross-sectional study, 1393 adult bariatric surgery candidates from the Toronto Western Hospital were recruited to complete the Emotional Eating Scale (EES), Patient Health Questionnaire-9 (PHQ9), Generalized Anxiety Disorder-7 (GAD7), Difficulties in Emotion Regulation Scale (DERS), Eating Disorder Examination Questionnaire (EDE-Q), and the Experiences for Close Relationships 16-item Scale (ECR-16) in order to explore the mediating role of emotion regulation on the relationship between attachment insecurity and emotional eating. Path analysis within a structural equation modeling framework examined direct and indirect effects of attachment insecurity on emotional eating.

Results: The indices of this overall model indicated that the specified set of direct and indirect pathways and corresponding correlations were a good fit with the data (RMSEA<.06, CFI=1.00; SRMR<.08). Moreover, tests of all of the possible indirect pathways between attachment style and emotional eating were significant.

Discussion: Findings suggest that difficulties in emotion regulation may be an important mechanism to consider when examining the association between attachment insecurity and emotional eating in adult bariatric surgery candidates. Although causality cannot be concluded, these results shed light on the important role that emotion regulation may have in predicting problematic eating in bariatric patients.

Keywords: Bariatric surgery; Emotion regulation; Emotional eating.

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