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Garner D., Olmsted M., Garfinkel P., Bohr Y.Potential link between body dysmorphicĭisorder symptoms and alexithymia in an eating-disordered treatment- seeking Journal of psychosomatic research, 2003, v.55. Its relationships with psychopathological and personality variables Alexithymia in parents of daughters with eatingĭisorders. Personality and individual differences, 2004, v. AlexithymiaĪnd its relationships with anxiety and depression in eating disorders // Eizaguirre A., de Cabezon A., de Alda I.Alexithymia inĬancer patients: review of the literature // Psychotherapy and psychosomatics, De Vries A.M.M., Forni V., Voellinger R., Stiefel F.Japanese adolescents: a review of the literature // Appetite, 2009, No 9. Perceptual and conceptual disturbances in anorexia nervosa Relationships with dissociative experiences, body dissatisfaction and eatingĭisturbances in a non-clinical female sample // Cogn. Berardis D., Serroni N., Campanella D.Relationships with body checking and body image in a non-clinical female sample The body appreciation scale:ĭevelopment and psychometric evaluation // Body image, 2005, No 2. Results highlight the potential importance of self-oriented perfectionism in eating disorders and support the argument that self-imposed standards are central to perfectionism in eating disorders.Ĭopyright © 2011 Elsevier Ltd.
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Self-oriented perfectionism, but not socially prescribed perfectionism, accounted for unique variance in weight and shape concern and dietary restraint in both AN and BN. Confirmatory factor analysis supported a two-factor model of the EDI-P comprising self-oriented and socially prescribed perfectionism. Two hundred and ninety nine females seeking treatment for an eating disorder at an outpatient eating disorder service completed the Eating Disorder Examination and the EDI-P. This study aimed to investigate the factor structure of the EDI-P in a transdiagnostic sample of females seeking treatment for an eating disorder, and to determine the unique association between EDI-P dimensions, weight and shape concern, and dietary restraint in anorexia nervosa (AN), bulimia nervosa (BN), and eating disorder not otherwise specified. However, research in non-clinical samples suggests that the EDI-P measures two dimensions of perfectionism: self-oriented and socially prescribed perfectionism. The Eating Disorder Inventory-2 Perfectionism subscale (EDI-P) was originally construed as a unidimensional measure of perfectionism.