Results 141 to 150 of about 65,249 (309)
ABSTRACT Objective Social comparison has been widely implicated in the etiology and maintenance of body dissatisfaction and eating disorders. At the same time, however, the magnitude of this relationship remains unclear, with existing studies varying widely in methodology, measurement, and sample characteristics.
Fidan Turk +5 more
wiley +1 more source
Tick‐Tock, the Time Has Come: Leveraging TikTok to Understand, Prevent, and Treat Eating Disorders
ABSTRACT Objective TikTok—a highly engaging social media platform with a powerful algorithm that displays short videos—has become massively popular in recent years. As research highlights the concerning relationship between image‐based content on social media and disordered eating symptoms, TikTok may serve as an optimal platform to understand eating ...
Macarena Kruger +3 more
wiley +1 more source
ABSTRACT Objective Many university students encounter barriers to timely support for disordered eating. Brief, scalable digital single‐session interventions (SSIs) may provide an engaging and accessible transdiagnostic pathway for early intervention where there is increased distress before a diagnosis emerges.
Maya Jabs, Tracey D. Wade
wiley +1 more source
Ebola : too far or so close? [PDF]
The year 2014 has witnessed the escalation of the largest ever Ebola outbreak which started in Guinea, and later spread to other countries in West Africa.
Pace, David, Torpiano, Paul
core
Daily Body (Dis‐)Satisfaction and Dietary Restriction in Women Across the Eating Disorder Spectrum
ABSTRACT Objective Body dissatisfaction is a key risk factor in eating disorder development: It is theorized to promote dietary restriction, thereby contributing to symptom onset. Evidence for this pathway primarily comes from cross‐sectional or multi‐wave questionnaire studies in bulimia nervosa (BN) and anorexia nervosa (AN).
Michaela R. Buehler +3 more
wiley +1 more source
Annals of the Child Neurology Society, EarlyView.
Gary D. Clark, Phillip L. Pearl
wiley +1 more source
Safe and Sound: Is Safeness a Specific Affective Dimension Related to Eating Disorder Behaviors?
ABSTRACT Objective Safeness is a warm, soothing emotional state that is often experienced in the presence of close others. Safeness is thought to be distinct from other positive emotions or the absence of negative emotions and is shown to predict mental health variables over and above other emotions.
Ege Bicaker +3 more
wiley +1 more source
Targeted alpha therapy (TAT) has recently emerged as a highly promising approach for the management of metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC), especially in patients with disease progression despite standard treatments.
Wael Jalloul +6 more
doaj +1 more source
Development and Validation of the Body Neutrality Questionnaire
ABSTRACT Objective Body neutrality has emerged as an alternative framework within the positive body image literature. This study developed the Body Neutrality Questionnaire (BNQ), the first validated measure of body neutrality for young adults. Method An initial item pool was developed using expert consultation and focus group review.
Amelia Kimpton +4 more
wiley +1 more source
Strategic Priorities for Advancing Eating Disorder Risk Reduction: A Narrative Review
ABSTRACT Despite decades of advances in treatment, eating disorders continue to impose substantial individual and societal burden, underscoring the need for earlier and more effective risk reduction. Prevention research has expanded considerably, producing a wide range of approaches that target modifiable risk factors, build individual coping skills ...
Hannah K. Jarman
wiley +1 more source

