Journal
JOURNAL OF CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGY
Volume 77, Issue 9, Pages 1954-1972Publisher
WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/jclp.23123
Keywords
acting with awareness mindfulness; binge eating; emotional eating; mindfulness; negative emotional eating; non‐ reactive mindfulness
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The study found that acting with awareness mindfulness weakened the association between emotional eating-depression and binge eating severity, while non-reactive mindfulness enhanced the association between the two. This suggests that acting with awareness and non-reactive mindfulness may be important treatment targets for addressing these maladaptive eating behaviors.
Objectives Negative emotional eating and binge eating are positively related, occur in diverse populations, and may be driven by similar mechanisms. Mindfulness facets such as acting with awareness, describe, non-judgement, non-reactive, and observe may moderate the relationship between these maladaptive eating phenotypes. Method A cross-sectional study assessed emotional eating-depression (Emotional Eating Scale-Revised, depression subscale), trait mindfulness facets (Five Facet Mindfulness Questionnaire-Short Form), and binge eating severity (Binge Eating Scale) in adults (N = 258). Results Emotional eating-depression was less strongly associated with binge eating severity in participants with higher acting with awareness mindfulness. Emotional eating-depression was more strongly associated with binge eating severity in participants with higher non-reactive mindfulness. Conclusions Acting with awareness and non-reactive mindfulness may be important treatment targets in concurrent presentations of emotional eating-depression and binge eating.
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