INTIMACY PATTERNS AND RELATIONSHIP SATISFACTION OF WOMEN WITH EATING PROBLEMS AND THE MEDIATING EFFECTS OF DEPRESSION, TRAIT ANXIETY AND SOCIAL ANXIETY
L. Evans et Eh. Wertheim, INTIMACY PATTERNS AND RELATIONSHIP SATISFACTION OF WOMEN WITH EATING PROBLEMS AND THE MEDIATING EFFECTS OF DEPRESSION, TRAIT ANXIETY AND SOCIAL ANXIETY, Journal of psychosomatic research, 44(3-4), 1998, pp. 355-365
The association between eating problems; and intimacy and relationship
styles was examined. Young adult females (n=360) completed the Adult
Attachment Style (AAS), questionnaire; questions on satisfaction with
intimacy; the Sexual Attitude Scale; items on sexual avoidance; a set
of six descriptions for mother, friend, and partner: and measures of d
epression, general anxiety, social anxiety, and eating problems. Women
with greater eating problems described more difficulties in intimate
relationships including less satisfaction with closeness, more discomf
ort in close intimate relationships, and less positive descriptions of
friend and mother. When depression, general anxiety, and social anxie
ty were entered first in a regression, intimacy measures no longer add
ed unique variance. However, public self-consciousness predicted over
and above general affect and social anxiety measures. Results were con
sistent with a mediator model in which intimacy difficulties for women
with eating problems are explained by depression, trait anxiety, and
public self-consciousness. (C) 1998 Elsevier Science Inc.