Adult Attachment and Body Dissatisfaction: The Role of Ethnicity

Body dissatisfaction has become commonplace, however, it has been associated with several detrimental outcomes, including eating disorders, depression, and suicidality. Despite having larger Body Mass Indexes, African American women have reported more satisfaction with their bodies than Caucasian Am...

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Main Author: Watsky-Scileppi, Caryn
Format: Others
Published: Scholarly Repository 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://scholarlyrepository.miami.edu/oa_dissertations/582
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spelling ndltd-UMIAMI-oai-scholarlyrepository.miami.edu-oa_dissertations-15832011-12-13T15:40:48Z Adult Attachment and Body Dissatisfaction: The Role of Ethnicity Watsky-Scileppi, Caryn Body dissatisfaction has become commonplace, however, it has been associated with several detrimental outcomes, including eating disorders, depression, and suicidality. Despite having larger Body Mass Indexes, African American women have reported more satisfaction with their bodies than Caucasian American women. Anxious attachment has been found to relate to body dissatisfaction; however, this study was the first to explore whether this relationship differs across ethnic groups. American societal beliefs about attractiveness and ethnic identity were also explored as potential moderators of the relationship between anxious attachment and body dissatisfaction. Purposive sampling was used to identify students from colleges with diverse ethnic representation for recruitment. Participants were 233 Caucasian American and 108 African American women recruited from ethnically diverse colleges in the Northeast and Southeast United States. Hypotheses were tested using hierarchical multiple regression and one-way analysis of covariance. Past findings regarding ethnic differences in body dissatisfaction were replicated as were findings regarding ethnic differences in attachment styles and the relationship between anxious attachment and body dissatisfaction, even after controlling for negative affect. Results of the primary analyses indicated no moderation by ethnicity of the relationship between anxious attachment and body dissatisfaction. Beliefs about attractiveness was found to moderate this relationship for Caucasian American but not African American women, and there was a trend for the moderation of the relationship between anxious attachment and body dissatisfaction by ethnic identity for the African American women in this sample. Implications for prevention and therapeutic interventions are discussed. 2011-05-25 text application/pdf http://scholarlyrepository.miami.edu/oa_dissertations/582 Open Access Dissertations Scholarly Repository Ethnicity Body Dissatisfaction Attachment
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Ethnicity
Body Dissatisfaction
Attachment
spellingShingle Ethnicity
Body Dissatisfaction
Attachment
Watsky-Scileppi, Caryn
Adult Attachment and Body Dissatisfaction: The Role of Ethnicity
description Body dissatisfaction has become commonplace, however, it has been associated with several detrimental outcomes, including eating disorders, depression, and suicidality. Despite having larger Body Mass Indexes, African American women have reported more satisfaction with their bodies than Caucasian American women. Anxious attachment has been found to relate to body dissatisfaction; however, this study was the first to explore whether this relationship differs across ethnic groups. American societal beliefs about attractiveness and ethnic identity were also explored as potential moderators of the relationship between anxious attachment and body dissatisfaction. Purposive sampling was used to identify students from colleges with diverse ethnic representation for recruitment. Participants were 233 Caucasian American and 108 African American women recruited from ethnically diverse colleges in the Northeast and Southeast United States. Hypotheses were tested using hierarchical multiple regression and one-way analysis of covariance. Past findings regarding ethnic differences in body dissatisfaction were replicated as were findings regarding ethnic differences in attachment styles and the relationship between anxious attachment and body dissatisfaction, even after controlling for negative affect. Results of the primary analyses indicated no moderation by ethnicity of the relationship between anxious attachment and body dissatisfaction. Beliefs about attractiveness was found to moderate this relationship for Caucasian American but not African American women, and there was a trend for the moderation of the relationship between anxious attachment and body dissatisfaction by ethnic identity for the African American women in this sample. Implications for prevention and therapeutic interventions are discussed.
author Watsky-Scileppi, Caryn
author_facet Watsky-Scileppi, Caryn
author_sort Watsky-Scileppi, Caryn
title Adult Attachment and Body Dissatisfaction: The Role of Ethnicity
title_short Adult Attachment and Body Dissatisfaction: The Role of Ethnicity
title_full Adult Attachment and Body Dissatisfaction: The Role of Ethnicity
title_fullStr Adult Attachment and Body Dissatisfaction: The Role of Ethnicity
title_full_unstemmed Adult Attachment and Body Dissatisfaction: The Role of Ethnicity
title_sort adult attachment and body dissatisfaction: the role of ethnicity
publisher Scholarly Repository
publishDate 2011
url http://scholarlyrepository.miami.edu/oa_dissertations/582
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