5 results match your criteria: "Center for Weight Control and Lifestyle Change[Affiliation]"
Eat Behav
March 2004
Structure House, Center for Weight Control and Lifestyle Change and Duke University, Durham, North Carolina 27708, USA.
In this study, we tested the proposition that the emotion-based eating of obese individuals is mediated by the effects of emotional arousal tendencies on brittle dieting self-restraint. Our indices of emotion-aroused eating, overeating, and brittle restraint were derived from a set of measures administered to 632 female and 254 male participants in a residential weight control and lifestyle change program. Mediation analyses indicated that (a) the relationship between positive emotion and overeating was entirely mediated by restraint tendencies and (b) the relationship between negative emotion eating and overeating was only partially mediated by brittle restraint.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEat Behav
March 2004
L.C.S.W., Structure House, Center for Weight Control and Lifestyle Change, 3017 Pickett Road, Durham, NC 27705, USA.
This study evaluated changes in the self-reported eating behaviors (snacking, binge eating, portion sizes, and meal skipping) of 52 obese adults (33 women and 19 men) attending a residential weight loss facility on two consecutive occasions. For each of the eating patterns studied, subjects reported engaging in the behavior significantly less frequently at the time of their return visit. It is proposed that changes in eating behaviors provide a useful and appropriate nonweight based outcome measure for estimating treatment success in diet-seeking clients.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObes Res
January 2002
Department of Psychology, Social and Health Sciences, Duke University, and Structure House, Center for Weight Control and Lifestyle Change, Durham, North Carolina 27705, USA.
Objective: Body image is considered as a potential mediator of the relationship between obesity and psychological distress.
Research Methods And Procedures: One hundred ten men and women in a residential weight control facility completed the Multidimensional Body Self-Relations Questionnaire, the Beck Depression Inventory, the Rosenberg Self-Esteem Scale, and the Binge Eating Scale.
Results: For both men and women, body-image satisfaction partially mediated the relationship between degree of overweight and depression/self-esteem.
Int J Eat Disord
September 1999
Center for Weight Control and Lifestyle Change, Durham, North Carolina, USA.
Objective: This study investigated the unique gender correlates of binge eating severity in a diet-seeking population.
Method: This sample consisted of 288 self-admitted patients enrolled in a residential weight loss program between 1996 and 1997. Subjects were administered several questionnaires including (a) the Binge Eating Scale, (b) the Beck Depression Inventory, (c) the Rosenberg Self-Esteem Scale, (d) 5-point scales of eating related foci, and (e) 7-point scales of subject confidence in controlling their eating under various circumstances.
Int J Eat Disord
January 1998
Center for Weight Control and Lifestyle Change, Durham, North Carolina, USA.
Objective: To explore gender differences in depression vulnerability among an obese, treatment-seeking population and to discern those components of eating-related phenomena that discriminate the depression-comorbid obese from their noncomorbid counterparts.
Method: This sample consisted of 1,184 self-admitted patients enrolled in a residential weight loss program between 1990 and 1995. Subjects were administered several questionnaires including (a) the Beck Depression Inventory, (b) 5-point scales of eating-related foci, and (c) 7-point scales of subject's confidence in their eating control under various circumstances.