Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
891350 | Personality and Individual Differences | 2013 | 5 Pages |
The present study aimed to investigate whether perfectionism mediates the association between obsessive–compulsive (OC) and eating disorder (ED) symptoms. Analyses were conducted using data collected among a national sample of eating disordered women diagnosed with BN or a subclinical variant of BN (N = 204). Each participant completed a series of self-report inventories on perfectionism, as well as OC, ED, and depressive symptoms. Higher ED symptoms were significantly associated with greater levels of perfectionism (p < .01) and OC symptoms (p < .05). As hypothesized, perfectionism significantly mediated the relationship between ED and OC symptoms, controlling for depression. Findings indicate that perfectionism may be considered a shared etiological or phenomenological factor in ED and OC symptoms.
► Perfectionism as a mediator between obsessive–compulsive and eating disorder symptoms. ► Higher ED symptoms were linked to greater perfectionism and greater OC symptoms. ► Perfectionism mediated the relationship between elevated OC and ED symptoms. ► Perfectionism may serve as a shared etiological feature among ED and OC symptoms.