| Literature DB >> 35313987 |
Rachel Bachner-Melman1,2, Yonatan Watermann3, Lilac Lev-Ari3,4, Ada H Zohar3,4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Disordered eating has been found to be associated with constructs involving self-repression, such as selflessness (the tendency to relinquish one's needs for others'), and concern for appropriateness (an alertness to information about social comparison and tendency to vary one's behavior in different social situations). This study aimed to examine associations between these self-repression variables and symptoms of general psychopathology for women and men in a community sample.Entities:
Keywords: Attention to social comparison information; Concern for appropriateness; Cross-situational variability; Disordered eating; Gender differences; Self-repression; Selflessness
Year: 2022 PMID: 35313987 PMCID: PMC8935791 DOI: 10.1186/s40337-022-00569-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Eat Disord ISSN: 2050-2974
Participants’ demographic characteristics and gender comparison
| Men (n = 92) | Women (n = 144) | Whole sample (N = 236) | Significance | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age | M = 35.36 + 12.50 | M = 25.12 + 5.20 | M = 29.11 + 10.10 | t = 8.73*** |
| BMI | M = 24.48 + 3.25 | M = 22.71 + 3.69 | M = 23.4 + 3.62 | t = 3.77*** |
| Mother tongue | 92.4% Hebrew 2.1% Arabic 2.1% Russian 3.3% other | 91.7% Hebrew 2.6% Arabic 2.4% Russian 3.3% other | 91.9% Hebrew 2.5% Arabic 2.3% Russian 3.3% other | χ2 = 0.04 |
| Religion | 94.6% Jewish 2.2% Muslim 3.2% other | 97.2% Jewish 2.8% Muslim | 96.2% Jewish 2.5% Muslim 1.3% other | χ2 = 1.08 |
| Education | 31.5% high school 33.7% BA 25% MA 9.8% other | 63.9% high school 25% BA 6.9% MA 4.2% other | 51.2% high school 28.4% BA 14% MA 6.4% other | χ2 = 34.94*** |
| Sexual orientation | 96.7% heterosexual 1.1% homosexual 1.1% bisexual 1.1% other | 95.8% heterosexual 2.1% lesbian 0.7% bisexual 1.4% other | 96.1% heterosexual 1.7% homosexual 0.9% bisexual 1.3% other | χ2 = 0.46 |
| Marital status | 39.1% single 46.7% married 10.9% in a relationship 3.3% other | 71.5% single 11.8% married 16% in a relationship 0.7% other | 58.9% single 25.4% married 14% in a relationship 1.6% other | χ2 = 41.23*** |
BMI body mass index
***p < .001 (2-tailed)
Fig. 1Gender differences for study variables (N = 227). *p < .05; **p < .01; ***p < .001
Pearson correlations between study variables (age entered as a covariate)
| Women (Men) | Cross-situational variability | Attention to social comparison information | Disordered eating | Depression | Somatization | Anxiety |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Selflessness | .02 (− .09) | .22** (.22*) | .17* (.14) | .21* (-.01) | .21* (-.01) | |
| Cross-situational variability | .46*** (.41***) | .20* (.17) | .36** (.23*) | |||
| Attention to social | .32*** (.20) | .28*** (.07) | ||||
| Comparison information | ||||||
| Disordered eating | .48*** (.40***) | .27** (.34***) | .34*** (.28**) | |||
| Depression | .66*** (.72**) | |||||
| Somatization | .72*** (.73***) | |||||
BOLD = significant differences between correlations
*p < .05; **p < .01; ***p < .001
Fig. 2SEM model depicting the associations of selflessness and the Concern for Appropriateness Scale subscales with measures of psychological pathology for men. *p < .05; **p < .01; ***p < .001
Fig. 3SEM model depicting the associations of selflessness and the Concern for Appropriateness Scale subscales with measures of psychological pathology measures for women. *p < .05; **p < .01; ***p < .001.