Frank E S
Department of Psychiatry, Mt. Auburn Hospital, Cambridge, Mass.
Am J Orthopsychiatry. 1991 Apr;61(2):303-6. doi: 10.1037/h0079241.
A study of 94 college students supported the hypothesis that women with eating disorders experience more shame and guilt in relation to eating than do either normal or depressed women, and that such shame and guilt differentiate the eating disorders from other psychopathology. Findings revealed an apparent difference in the nature of the depression experienced by eating disordered women and that of depressed women without such disorders. Developmental and clinical implications are discussed.
一项针对94名大学生的研究支持了以下假设:饮食失调的女性在饮食方面比正常女性或抑郁女性体验到更多的羞耻和内疚,并且这种羞耻和内疚将饮食失调与其他精神病理学区分开来。研究结果揭示了饮食失调女性所经历的抑郁与无此类疾病的抑郁女性所经历的抑郁在本质上存在明显差异。文中还讨论了其发展和临床意义。