Authors
Glenn Waller, Vartouhi Ohanian, Caroline Meyer, Selen Osman
Publication date
2000/9
Journal
International Journal of Eating Disorders
Volume
28
Issue
2
Pages
235-241
Publisher
John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
Description
Objective
Most cognitive analyses of bulimic disorders have stressed the role of negative automatic thoughts or dysfunctional assumptions regarding weight, shape, and food. This study considered the role of more general core beliefs in the cognitive content of bulimic disorders.
Methods
Fifty bulimic and 50 comparison women completed the Schema Questionnaire (YSQ) and a diary measure of bulimic behaviors.
Results
The groups could be differentiated using just three of the beliefs: perceived Defectiveness/Shame, Insufficient Self‐Control, and Failure to Achieve. This discrimination included differences between bulimic subgroups. At the symptomatic level, the bulimic women's Emotional Inhibition beliefs predicted their severity of binging, whereas their Defectiveness/Shame beliefs predicted severity of vomiting.
Conclusions
The findings support a model of bulimic psychopathology where the central …
Total citations
199920002001200220032004200520062007200820092010201120122013201420152016201720182019202020212022202320242287811192222161211151210161198102313511103
Scholar articles
G Waller, V Ohanian, C Meyer, S Osman - International Journal of Eating Disorders, 2000