4.4 Article

The Role of Resilience in Psychological Health Among Bariatric Surgery Patients

Journal

OBESITY SURGERY
Volume 32, Issue 3, Pages 792-800

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11695-021-05855-3

Keywords

Resilience; Psychological health; Bariatric surgery; Obesity

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This study explores resilience in bariatric surgery patients and found that post-operative resilience is associated with lower symptoms of binge eating, disordered eating, depression, anxiety, and impact of weight on quality of life. Resilience is also linked to greater social support, less social stress, and greater use of approach coping strategies. The findings highlight the importance of considering patient resilience in psychological assessments and interventions in the field of obesity and bariatric surgery.
Objective Many individuals who undergo bariatric surgery have experienced repeated unsuccessful diet attempts and negative messages from healthcare providers, family, and others about their weight. Research pre- and post-operatively has taken a pathological or risk-based approach, investigating psychiatric problems and disordered eating. In contrast, the current study explores resilience in this population. Methods Participants were 148 bariatric surgery patients. Participants completed measures pre-operatively and 1.5-3 years post-operatively, including the Binge Eating Scale, Eating Disorder Examination Questionnaire, Patient Health Questionnaire, Generalized Anxiety Questionnaire, Impact of Weight on Quality of Life, Coping Responses Inventory, and Duke Social Support and Stress Scales. The Connor-Davidson Resilience Scale was measured post-operatively. Results Correlations demonstrated a significant association between post-operative resilience and lower symptoms of binge eating, disordered eating, depression, anxiety, and impact of weight on quality of life. Resilience was also associated with greater social support and less social stress, and greater use of approach coping strategies. Resilience was significantly associated with improvements in symptoms of binge eating, disordered eating, depression, anxiety, and impact of weight on quality of life from pre- to post-operative assessments. In regression models, associations remained significant after controlling for psychosocial variables at baseline (e.g., binge eating symptoms pre-operatively) and demographic covariates. Conclusions Psychological resilience has been under-studied in the literature on obesity and bariatric surgery, with a primary focus on risk factors for poor outcomes. This study was among the first to investigate associations between resilience and post-operative psychological outcomes. Results suggest the field would benefit from consideration of patient resilience in psychological assessments and interventions.

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