Emerging empirical evidence supports muscularity bias internalization as a close correlate of muscularity-oriented disordered eating, muscle dysmorphia symptoms, and eating-related psychosocial impairment. However, there is a lack of research investigating the longitudinal links of muscularity bias internalization with these related variables. Drawing on longitudinal research evidence from weight bias internalization supporting reciprocal associations with biopsychosocial outcomes, the present study examined the reciprocal associations of muscularity bias internalization with muscularity-oriented disordered eating, muscle dysmorphia symptoms, and eating-related psychosocial impairment. An online sample of 799 Chinese adults (400 men and 399 women; baseline M=29.96 years) provided data at baseline (T1) and six months later (T2). Cross-lagged regression analyses were conducted. Results showed that muscularity bias internalization had reciprocal associations with these three variables. Specifically, muscularity bias internalization at T1 was associated with higher muscularity-oriented disordered eating, muscle dysmorphia symptoms, and eating-related psychosocial impairment at T2. Also, higher muscularity-oriented disordered eating, muscle dysmorphia symptoms, and eating-related psychosocial impairment at T1 were associated with higher muscularity bias internalization at T2. Findings suggest cyclic associations between muscularity bias internalization and muscularity-oriented disordered eating, muscle dysmorphia symptoms, and eating-related psychosocial impairment, and interventions targeting muscularity bias internalization may be a promising strategy to reduce muscularity-related psychopathology.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.bodyim.2025.101862 | DOI Listing |
J Acad Nutr Diet
March 2025
Assistant Professor, Department of Psychiatry, Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, CT, USA. Electronic address:
Background: Parental overvaluation (parental identity based on their child's weight) and parental weight bias internalization (parents' internalization of societal bias towards people living in larger bodies) are both associated with their children's disordered eating. Less is known about the extent to which these constructs overlap and how their combination may relate to pediatric disordered eating.
Objective: The current study examined the relationship between parental overvaluation, parental internalized weight bias, and children's disordered eating to test whether parental overvaluation was associated with child disordered eating beyond the effects of parent internalized weight bias.
Body Image
March 2025
Division of Adolescent & Young Adult Medicine, Department of Pediatrics, University of California, San Francisco, CA, USA.
Emerging empirical evidence supports muscularity bias internalization as a close correlate of muscularity-oriented disordered eating, muscle dysmorphia symptoms, and eating-related psychosocial impairment. However, there is a lack of research investigating the longitudinal links of muscularity bias internalization with these related variables. Drawing on longitudinal research evidence from weight bias internalization supporting reciprocal associations with biopsychosocial outcomes, the present study examined the reciprocal associations of muscularity bias internalization with muscularity-oriented disordered eating, muscle dysmorphia symptoms, and eating-related psychosocial impairment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Nurs Stud Adv
June 2025
School of Nursing, Xinjiang Medical University, 567 Shangde North Road, Urumqi 830017, Xinjiang, China.
Background: Weight stigma is linked to adverse effects, but whether it directly heightens the risk of disordered eating behaviors or psychological factors mediate this connection among postpartum women is uncertain.
Objectives: To investigate the relationship between perceived weight stigma and disordered eating behaviors (restrained eating, emotional eating, and external eating) and identify the mediating role of weight bias internalization and postpartum depression (PPD).
Methods: This cross-sectional study involved 507 postpartum women.
J Korean Acad Nurs
February 2025
College of NursingㆍResearch Institute of Nursing Science, Ajou University, Suwon, Korea.
Purpose: This study systematically reviewed and analyzed the effects of non-pharmacological interventions on internalized stigma among people with severe mental illness.
Methods: A systematic review and meta-analysis were conducted following the Cochrane Intervention Research Systematic Review Manual and Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis guidelines. This study targeted people with severe mental illness as the population, interventions aimed at reducing internalized stigma, comparisons with control groups, and internalized stigma as the outcome.
Obes Surg
February 2025
Children's Health System of Texas, Dallas, USA.
Background: Weight bias internalization (WBI) negatively effects health outcomes in people with obesity. Little is known about how these experiences relate to quality of life and vary in racially/ethnically diverse adolescents with severe obesity. Associations between WBI and health-related quality of life (HRQOL) by race/ethnicity among a sample of adolescents seeking metabolic and bariatric surgery (MBS) were examined in this analysis.
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