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Sexual Functioning and Eating Disorders: Examining the Role of Gender and Internalizing Symptoms
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Objective: Eating disorders (EDs) are frequently associated with sexual dysfunction; however, no research has tested this relationship while adjusting for the known effects of anxiety and depression on sexual functioning. Furthermore, there is a notable lack of research on sexual functioning problems and ED symptoms among men.Method: Undergraduate women (n = 1488) and men (n = 646) completed measures of ED psychopathology and sexual functioning problems. Hierarchical linear regressions predicting sexual functioning problems were conducted separately by gender including BMI, age, sexual orientation, anxiety and depression symptoms in Step 1 and an ED psychopathology variable (e.g., global score, dietary restraint, preoccupation and eating concern, or shape/weight overvaluation) in Step 2.Results: For women, changes in proportion of the variance in sexual functioning problems when adding global score, dietary restraint and preoccupation and eating concern to the models were statistically significant, but effect sizes were very small. Change in variance when adding weight and shape overvaluation was not significant. For men, all ED psychopathology variables accounted for significant changes in the proportion of variance in sexual functioning problems.Discussion: Sexual functioning problems observed in women may be better explained by depressive symptomology, as variance explained by ED variables, while statistically significant, was small and likely of lower clinical relevance. Sexual functioning problems in men may be minorly influenced by ED psychopathology, independent of depression and anxiety symptoms. Results suggest the importance of screening for sexual functioning problems among adults with EDs, particularly men.
Center for Open Science
Title: Sexual Functioning and Eating Disorders: Examining the Role of Gender and Internalizing Symptoms
Description:
Objective: Eating disorders (EDs) are frequently associated with sexual dysfunction; however, no research has tested this relationship while adjusting for the known effects of anxiety and depression on sexual functioning.
Furthermore, there is a notable lack of research on sexual functioning problems and ED symptoms among men.
Method: Undergraduate women (n = 1488) and men (n = 646) completed measures of ED psychopathology and sexual functioning problems.
Hierarchical linear regressions predicting sexual functioning problems were conducted separately by gender including BMI, age, sexual orientation, anxiety and depression symptoms in Step 1 and an ED psychopathology variable (e.
g.
, global score, dietary restraint, preoccupation and eating concern, or shape/weight overvaluation) in Step 2.
Results: For women, changes in proportion of the variance in sexual functioning problems when adding global score, dietary restraint and preoccupation and eating concern to the models were statistically significant, but effect sizes were very small.
Change in variance when adding weight and shape overvaluation was not significant.
For men, all ED psychopathology variables accounted for significant changes in the proportion of variance in sexual functioning problems.
Discussion: Sexual functioning problems observed in women may be better explained by depressive symptomology, as variance explained by ED variables, while statistically significant, was small and likely of lower clinical relevance.
Sexual functioning problems in men may be minorly influenced by ED psychopathology, independent of depression and anxiety symptoms.
Results suggest the importance of screening for sexual functioning problems among adults with EDs, particularly men.
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