Testing risk and protective pathways between weight bias and mental health symptoms in a bariatric sample: Internalized weight bias, shame, and self-compassion
Background: Experienced weight bias (EWB) causes poor psychosocial and behavioral health in bariatric surgery patients pre- and post-operatively, yet little research has examined related mechanisms or risk/protective pathways. The current study tests a mediational model positing risk paths between EWB, internalized weight bias (IWB), shame, and effects on mental health symptoms. Self-compassion (SC), an affect regulation strategy inversely linked to each risk factor, was tested as a mediating protective factor.
Source: Surgery for Obesity and Related Diseases - Category: Surgery Authors: Tosca Braun, Diane Quinn, Andrea Stone, Jennifer Ferrand, Amy A Gorin, Jessica Sierra, Rebecca Puhl, Gina Sensale, Darren Tishler, Pavlos K Papasavas Source Type: research
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