97 research outputs found
Recommended from our members
The role of attachment in body weight gain and weight loss in bariatric patients
Purpose: To explore the role of attachment styles in obesity.
Material and methods: The present study explored differences in insecure attachment styles between an obese sample waiting for bariatric surgery (n=195) and an age, sex and height matched normal weight control group (n=195). It then explored the role of attachment styles in predicting change in BMI one year post bariatric surgery (n=143).
Results: The bariatric group reported significantly higher levels of anxious attachment and lower levels of avoidant attachment than the control non obese group. Baseline attachment styles did not, however, predict change in BMI post-surgery.
Conclusion: Attachment style is different in those that are already obese from those who are not. Attachment was not related to weight loss post-surgery
Emotion, True Self, True Other, Core State: Toward a Clinical Theory of Affective Change Process
Becoming “Teletherapeutic”: Harnessing Accelerated Experiential Dynamic Psychotherapy (AEDP) for Challenges of the Covid-19 Era
Transforming emotional suffering into flourishing: metatherapeutic processing of positive affect as a trans-theoretical vehicle for change
Working through shame with an intercultural couple in Japan: Transforming negative emotional interactions and expanding positive emotional resources
- …
