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Avoidance of affect in the eating disorders. | LitMetric

Avoidance of affect in the eating disorders.

Eat Behav

School of Psychology, University of Western Australia, 35 Stirling Highway, Crawley, WA 6009, Australia.

Published: January 2011

AI Article Synopsis

  • The Distress Tolerance Scale (DTS) assesses how individuals use strategies to handle both positive and negative emotions, with a focus on the avoidance of affect.
  • A study involving 227 female university students and 257 clients with eating disorders revealed that the original proposed factor structures for the DTS were inadequate based on confirmatory factor analysis.
  • An exploratory analysis identified three specific types of affect avoidance and found significant links between these avoidance patterns and eating disorders, highlighting the need for future research to consider the impact of both negative and positive emotions in relation to eating psychopathology.

Article Abstract

The Distress Tolerance Scale (DTS) (Corstorphine, Mountford, Tomlinson, Waller, & Meyer, 2007) measures the tendency to use cognitive and behavioural strategies to manage the experience of positive and negative affect. This paper aimed to explore the factor structure of the DTS, particularly in relation to avoidance of affect. Participants were 227 female university students (non-clinical sample) and 257 clients seeking treatment for an eating disorder (clinical sample). Confirmatory factor analysis was used to test two previously proposed factor structures of the DTS in the non-clinical sample. Both of these models were found to be a poor fit to the data. Subsequently, nine items measuring avoidance of affect were analysed using exploratory factor analysis in the non-clinical sample. Three factors of avoidance of affect were identified (Behavioural Avoidance of Positive Affect, Behavioural Avoidance of Negative Affect, and Cognitive Avoidance of Affect). Confirmatory factor analysis supported this avoidance of affect model in the clinical sample. Significant correlations were observed between avoidance of affect subscales and eating psychopathology in both samples. Results suggest that the avoidance of positive emotion may be an important factor in eating disorders. It is recommended that future studies broaden their investigation of the role of emotion in eating disorders to include both negative and positive emotion.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.eatbeh.2010.11.004DOI Listing

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