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Self-esteem and negative affectivity as mediators of the prospective links between adolescent interpersonal peer problems and disordered eating behaviors

Authors :
Beckers, D.
Larsen, J.K.
Burk, W.J.
Beckers, D.
Larsen, J.K.
Burk, W.J.
Source :
Appetite; 0195-6663; 186; 106558; ~Appetite~~~~~0195-6663~~186~~106558
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Item does not contain fulltext<br />The current prospective study examined whether both self-esteem and negative affectivity mediate subsequent associations between interpersonal peer problems (i.e., peer victimization, peer rejection, lack of friendships) and disordered eating behaviors (i.e., loss of control while overeating, emotional eating, restrained eating) in adolescents using secondary data. The sample included 2051 adolescents (Mage baseline = 13.81, SDage baseline = 0.72; 48.5% female) who participated in a longitudinal project, which includes three annually collected waves of data. Participants completed self-report and peer-report measures describing interpersonal problems with peers, and self-report measures describing negative affectivity, self-esteem, and disordered eating behaviors. The results provided no support for either self-esteem or negative affectivity as mediators of the associations between interpersonal peer problems and disordered eating behaviors two years later. However, self-esteem was more robustly linked to all three types of subsequent disordered eating behaviors than negative affectivity. This highlights the importance of adolescent's self-evaluations in the development of disordered eating behaviors.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Appetite; 0195-6663; 186; 106558; ~Appetite~~~~~0195-6663~~186~~106558
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1380688669
Document Type :
Electronic Resource