AI Article Synopsis

  • Emotion regulation (ER) involves how individuals manage their emotions, and this study investigates how adaptive ER and maladaptive ER interact in relation to eating disorder (ED) symptoms and related impairments.
  • Higher levels of adaptive ER (through strategies like cognitive reappraisal) are linked to fewer ED symptoms and lower impairment, while maladaptive ER (using distraction and suppression) shows the opposite effect.
  • The findings indicate that improving adaptive ER could help mitigate the negative impact of maladaptive ER on ED symptoms, highlighting the importance of intervention strategies focused on enhancing adaptive ER skills in individuals with eating disorders.

Article Abstract

Purpose: Emotion regulation (ER) refers to the processes by which individuals influence the onset, intensity, and duration of emotions. Previous studies have examined the effects of adaptive ER and maladaptive ER in isolation, but growing evidence suggests that they should be studied in conjunction. This study examined the interactions between habitual adaptive and maladaptive ER strategies with eating disorder (ED) symptoms and ED-related clinical impairment.

Methods: Students (N = 1377) from a Midwestern American university reported ED symptoms, ED-related impairment, habitual adaptive ER (i.e., cognitive reappraisal), and habitual maladaptive ER (i.e., distraction and suppression). Multiple linear regressions were conducted using the PROCESS v3 macro.

Results: The study found that adaptive ER was negatively associated with ED symptoms and ED-related impairment, whereas maladaptive ER was positively associated with both outcome variables. Adaptive ER moderated the association between maladaptive ER and ED symptoms, but not clinical impairment. When habitual adaptive ER was low (< 33.4th percentile), there was no association between maladaptive ER and ED symptoms; however, when habitual adaptive ER was moderate to high (> 33.4th percentile), there was a positive association between frequency of maladaptive ER use and ED symptoms. There was no significant three-way interaction among adaptive ER, maladaptive ER, and probable ED diagnosis, for ED-related impairment or symptoms.

Conclusion: Results suggest that irrespective of frequency of maladaptive ER, people with low adaptive ER reported elevated psychopathology. Findings point to the utility of interventions to reduce maladaptive ER and increase adaptive ER in ED populations.

Level Of Evidence: Level V, cross-sectional descriptive study.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10042081PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s40519-022-01399-2DOI Listing

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