Non-specific terminology: Moderating shame and guilt in eating disorders.

Abstract:

:To examine the effects of terminology on affect, 110 women with eating disorders were randomly assigned to read a manufactured discussion thread with uses of the term "acting out," a thread with clinical terms, or were assigned to a no-reading control. An interaction effect was found in which participants who were treated at a day or inpatient level and were in the "acting out" condition experienced reductions in shame and guilt, while those in the clinical term condition experienced increases in shame and guilt, relative to control participants. The ability of terminology to moderate shame and guilt in this population has implications for clinical practice.

journal_name

Eat Disord

journal_title

Eating disorders

authors

Duffy ME,Henkel KE

doi

10.1080/10640266.2015.1027120

subject

Has Abstract

pub_date

2016-01-01 00:00:00

pages

161-72

issue

2

eissn

1064-0266

issn

1532-530X

journal_volume

24

pub_type

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