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Emotion regulation across eating pathology: A meta-analysis

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TLDR
Overall, emotion regulation did not differ across eating disorders, a finding supporting the transdiagnostic character of emotion regulation problems in eating pathology and important theoretical and practical implications for prevention and intervention programs.
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This article is published in Appetite.The article was published on 2019-12-01. It has received 139 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Eating disorders & Binge eating.

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Citations
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The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on individuals with eating disorders: the role of emotion regulation and exploration of online treatment experiences

TL;DR: The Covid-19 pandemic has wrought disruption to everyday life and services, and emerging evidence suggests that those with eating disorders are likely to experience marked distress and exacerbation of their symptoms as discussed by the authors.
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Depression, Anxiety and Eating Disorder-Related Impairment: Moderators in Female Adolescents and Young Adults.

TL;DR: Young age appeared to augment the association of anxiety/depression and eating disorder symptomatology, and Preventive care in particular needs to consider age-related effects as eating disorder symptoms are associated more strongly with symptoms of anxiety and depression in early adolescence.
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Emotion regulation difficulties interact with negative, not positive, emotional eating to strengthen relationships with disordered eating: An exploratory study.

TL;DR: Higher negative emotional eating was associated with higher weight concerns and global scores of disordered eating when emotion regulation difficulties was average and increased and lower dietary restraint when emotionregulation difficulties was decreased.
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Body Dissatisfaction, Restrictive, and Bulimic Behaviours Among Young Women: A Polish-Japanese Comparison.

TL;DR: The global internalization of socio-cultural standards of body image proved to be a significant predictor of Body Dissatisfaction among Polish and Japanese women and could improve the prevention aimed the dysfunctional eating behaviours.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Emotion dysregulation as a mechanism through which parental magnification of sadness increases risk for binge eating and limited control of eating behaviors.

TL;DR: A specific parenting practice is identified which may contribute to the development of disordered eating behaviors and a potential mechanism to explain this relation is identified.
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Emotion dysregulation across the spectrum of pathological eating: Comparisons among women with binge eating, overeating, and loss of control eating.

TL;DR: Women with OBEs had significantly more difficulty with overall emotion dysregulation, access to strategies, and impulse control when upset than other groups, and certain emotion regulation facets may differentially relate to overeating and LOC.
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Effects of emotional acceptance and rumination on media-induced body dissatisfaction in anorexia and bulimia nervosa.

TL;DR: Results suggest that emotional acceptance is a useful strategy to regulate body dissatisfaction after exposure to thin-ideal media in BN and highlight the importance ruminative thinking may have in the aggravation of dissatisfaction with the own body in AN and BN.
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Differences in coping across stages of recovery from an eating disorder.

TL;DR: Results provide support for a comprehensive definition of eating disorder recovery, of which healthy coping may be an integral component, and for the re-evaluation of the notion of "maladaptive" coping.
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Binge Eating as Related to Negative Self-Awareness, Depression, and Avoidance Coping in Undergraduates.

TL;DR: In this paper, female undergraduate students were grouped as binge-eaters (BE) or non-eating-disordered (NED) for analyses, and the BE group scored significantly higher than the NED group on avoidance coping and substance use when depression was not controlled.
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