培养超级女性和情绪化进食者:探讨黑人大学女性对歧视的社会化应对反应与饮食病理行为之间的关系

IF 1.9 Q3 PSYCHOLOGY, APPLIED JOURNAL OF COLLEGE STUDENT PSYCHOTHERAPY Pub Date : 2022-03-02 DOI:10.1080/87568225.2022.2043979
Buffie Longmire-Avital, J. Finkelstein
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Raising Super Women… And Emotional Eaters (?): Exploring the Relationship between Socialized Coping Responses to Discrimination and Eating Pathology Behaviors for Collegiate Black Women
ABSTRACT Black American collegiate women encounter microaggressions. The need to constantly regulate intense emotions in a sanctioned way to avoid further gendered-racial ramifications may increase emotional distress and lead to the use of high effort coping, such as the Strong Black Woman (SBW) schema. This anonymous online mixed-data study explored the relationships among discrimination, the superwoman schema, and emotional eating for college enrolled self-identified Black American women. Further, this study also examined the advice these women recalled receiving about how to navigate discrimination from their maternal figures. A hierarchical linear regression was run on 102 women (F (6, 94) = 6.24, p = .001) and revealed that the SBW was the most impactful predictor of emotional eating (R2 = 0.29, p = .001). The women concurrently recounted receiving messages from their mothers urging them to persist through discrimination and racism while being strong Black women.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.20
自引率
7.10%
发文量
16
期刊介绍: The Journal of College Student Psychotherapy® is dedicated to enhancing the lives of college and university students by featuring high-quality articles about practice, theory, and research in mental health and personal development. Contributions to the journal come from professionals in the field of mental health and counseling and from college staff, faculty, and students. The journal is written specifically for college and university administrative staff and faculty as well as counselors and mental health professionals. Regular quarterly issues of the journal feature articles of central interest to psychotherapists and counselors while also expressing broader implications for everyone who wishes to understand students.
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