Affiliation:
1. Department of Psychology Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Blacksburg Virginia USA
2. School of Nursing University of Rochester Medical Center Rochester New York USA
3. Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Neuroscience University of Chicago Medicine and Biological Sciences Chicago Illinois USA
4. Department of Medical Social Sciences Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine Chicago Illinois USA
Abstract
AbstractObjectiveTo compare participants with current food insecurity and different psychopathology profiles on shame, guilt, anxiety, and depression using a cross‐sectional design.MethodWomen with current food insecurity (n = 99; 54% White) were placed into four groups based on their endorsement of symptoms of psychopathology: eating disorder with depression/anxiety comorbidity (ED‐C group; n = 17), depression/anxiety only (Depression/anxiety group; n = 34), eating disorder only (ED group; n = 12), and No‐diagnosis group (n = 36). Groups were compared on self‐report measures of shame, guilt, depression, and anxiety using analysis of covariance.ResultsThe presence of an eating disorder was associated with quadruple the risk of screening positive for comorbid depression and anxiety. The ED‐C group reported elevated shame relative to the ED and No‐diagnosis groups. The ED‐C group reported the highest levels of anxiety, followed by the Depression/anxiety group, and the ED and No‐diagnosis groups.DiscussionThe presence of an eating disorder with comorbidity among women with food insecurity is associated with heightened shame. Given shame's status as a transdiagnostic predictor of psychopathology, it may serve as a putative mechanism underlying the relationship between food insecurity and eating disorder comorbidity.Public Significance StatementWomen with food insecurity and an ED were more likely to also screen positive for depression and/or anxiety than women with food insecurity and no ED. Overlap between ED, depression, and anxiety was associated with elevated shame, a harmful, maladaptive emotion with negative psychosocial consequences.
Funder
National Institute of Mental Health
University of Chicago
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health
Cited by
1 articles.
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