The Relationship between Self-Compassion and Predictors of Depressed Mood in Parents of People with Eating Disorders

Pamela Fox, Gerald H. Burgess, Chris Irons
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Abstract

The aim of this study was to examine the relationships between self-compassion and possible predictors of depressed mood in parents of people with eating disorders. A questionnaire design was conducted cross‐sectionally in a sample of 112 parents of people with eating disorders. Participants completed measures of depressed mood, experiences of entrapment, shame, guilt, self-criticism and self-compassion. Regression analyses showed entrapment and self-criticism to be mediators between the relationship of shame and depressed mood. Self-compassion appeared to reduce the experience of depressed mood through its effect on shame and entrapment. Self-compassion also appeared to reduce the experience of depressed mood through its effect on self-criticism. This study explored processes of depression and the buffering effects of self-compassion on these processes. These findings support an evolutionary understanding of depressed mood and the potential benefits of applying compassion-focused interventions for parents of people with eating disorders.
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自我同情与饮食失调患者父母抑郁情绪的预测因素之间的关系
本研究旨在探讨自我同情与饮食失调症患者父母抑郁情绪的可能预测因素之间的关系。研究对 112 名饮食失调患者的父母进行了横向问卷调查。参与者填写了有关抑郁情绪、被禁锢体验、羞耻感、负罪感、自我批评和自我同情的问卷。回归分析表明,禁锢和自我批评是羞耻感与抑郁情绪之间关系的中介。自我同情似乎通过对羞耻感和束缚感的影响来减少抑郁情绪的体验。自我同情似乎还通过对自我批评的影响来减少抑郁情绪的体验。这项研究探讨了抑郁的过程以及自我同情对这些过程的缓冲作用。这些发现支持对抑郁情绪的进化理解,以及对饮食失调患者的父母采取以同情为重点的干预措施的潜在益处。
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