Subthreshold binge eating disorder
β Scribed by Striegel-Moore, Ruth H. ;Dohm, F. A. ;Solomon, E. E. ;Fairburn, C. G. ;Pike, K. M. ;Wilfley, D. E.
- Publisher
- Wiley (John Wiley & Sons)
- Year
- 2000
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 158 KB
- Volume
- 27
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0276-3478
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Objective: To examine the clinical features of subthreshold binge eating disorder (BED). Method: Participants were recruited directly from the community as part of an ongoing study of risk factors for BED. Forty-four women with subthreshold BED were compared with 44 women with BED and 44 healthy controls on demographic characteristics, body mass index (BMI), eating disorder symptomatology, and psychiatric distress. Diagnoses were established using the Eating Disorder Examination (EDE). Participants completed the EDE-Questionnaire, the Brief Symptom Inventory, and were measured and weighed. Results: Adjusting for significant group differences in BMI, the two eating disorder groups did not differ significantly on measures of weight and shape concern, restraint, psychiatric distress, and history of seeking treatment for an eating or weight problem. Discussion: Given the importance of diagnostic status for access to treatment, further evaluation of the severity criterion specified for BED is needed.
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Objective: To investigate the relationships between binge eating disorder and night eating in severely obese patients. Design: Longitudinal study following biliopancreatic diversion, when any preoccupation with food and weight is completely abandoned. Materials and Methods: Structured interview prio
## Objective: Potential differences in the hedonics of binge eating between female subjects with bulimia nervosa (bn) and female subjects with binge eating disorder (bed) were examined. ## Method: Women seeking treatment for bn (n = 29) and bed (n = 49) completed the eating hedonics questionnaire
Binge-eating episodes have alternately been described as stemming from strict dieting behaviors driven by overvalued ideas of weight and shape, or as arising from problematic interpersonal experiences. A third way of conceptualizing an eating binge is as a maladaptive emotion-regulation strategy, su