Attachment, eating behaviour and weight loss : a cohort study of patients before and after bariatric surgery

Primary objective : This study assessed the degree of insecure attachment style in a sample of patients undergoing bariatric surgery compared to a normal weight control group. It also investigated the association between attachment style and eating behaviour within the bariatric group pre-surgery an...

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Main Author: Nancarrow, Abigail M.
Other Authors: Ogden, J.
Published: University of Surrey 2015
Subjects:
150
Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.667620
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-6676202016-11-18T03:23:30ZAttachment, eating behaviour and weight loss : a cohort study of patients before and after bariatric surgeryNancarrow, Abigail M.Ogden, J.2015Primary objective : This study assessed the degree of insecure attachment style in a sample of patients undergoing bariatric surgery compared to a normal weight control group. It also investigated the association between attachment style and eating behaviour within the bariatric group pre-surgery and the impact of attachment on weight loss 6 months post-surgery. Design and method: A cross sectional and cohort quantitative design was used. The bariatric group consisted of 195 patients recruited from a bariatric clinic who were compared with 195 normal weight controls recruited through social media. All participants completed the ECR-R and provided demographic information. The bariatric group also completed measures of control over eating, diet and exercise behaviour, behavioural intentions, and the Power of Food Scale. T-tests and correlations were used for analysis. Outcome and results: The bariatric group demonstrated significantly higher levels of attachment avoidance and lower levels of attachment anxiety than controls. Significant correlations were found between insecure attachment and hedonic wanting of food, and attachment anxiety was significantly correlated with control over eating. No significant correlations were found between attachment and weight loss at 6 months follow up. Conclusion: A potentially causal relationship between attachment and obesity is discussed, as well as the implications for clinical psychology in bariatric services.150University of Surreyhttp://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.667620http://epubs.surrey.ac.uk/808520/Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 150
spellingShingle 150
Nancarrow, Abigail M.
Attachment, eating behaviour and weight loss : a cohort study of patients before and after bariatric surgery
description Primary objective : This study assessed the degree of insecure attachment style in a sample of patients undergoing bariatric surgery compared to a normal weight control group. It also investigated the association between attachment style and eating behaviour within the bariatric group pre-surgery and the impact of attachment on weight loss 6 months post-surgery. Design and method: A cross sectional and cohort quantitative design was used. The bariatric group consisted of 195 patients recruited from a bariatric clinic who were compared with 195 normal weight controls recruited through social media. All participants completed the ECR-R and provided demographic information. The bariatric group also completed measures of control over eating, diet and exercise behaviour, behavioural intentions, and the Power of Food Scale. T-tests and correlations were used for analysis. Outcome and results: The bariatric group demonstrated significantly higher levels of attachment avoidance and lower levels of attachment anxiety than controls. Significant correlations were found between insecure attachment and hedonic wanting of food, and attachment anxiety was significantly correlated with control over eating. No significant correlations were found between attachment and weight loss at 6 months follow up. Conclusion: A potentially causal relationship between attachment and obesity is discussed, as well as the implications for clinical psychology in bariatric services.
author2 Ogden, J.
author_facet Ogden, J.
Nancarrow, Abigail M.
author Nancarrow, Abigail M.
author_sort Nancarrow, Abigail M.
title Attachment, eating behaviour and weight loss : a cohort study of patients before and after bariatric surgery
title_short Attachment, eating behaviour and weight loss : a cohort study of patients before and after bariatric surgery
title_full Attachment, eating behaviour and weight loss : a cohort study of patients before and after bariatric surgery
title_fullStr Attachment, eating behaviour and weight loss : a cohort study of patients before and after bariatric surgery
title_full_unstemmed Attachment, eating behaviour and weight loss : a cohort study of patients before and after bariatric surgery
title_sort attachment, eating behaviour and weight loss : a cohort study of patients before and after bariatric surgery
publisher University of Surrey
publishDate 2015
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.667620
work_keys_str_mv AT nancarrowabigailm attachmenteatingbehaviourandweightlossacohortstudyofpatientsbeforeandafterbariatricsurgery
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