ABSTRACT
This study examined the relationship between behavioral and psychological aspects of exercise and eating disorder recovery. Participants were categorized as having an eating disorder (n = 53), partially recovered (n = 15), fully recovered (n = 20), or non-eating disorder controls (n = 67). Groups did not differ significantly in time spent exercising, but did differ in exercise intensity, guilt-related exercise, obsessive exercise cognitions, and appearance/weight management and stress/mood management motivations for exercise. Results support the importance of measuring psychological aspects of exercise in particular across the course of an eating disorder.
Acknowledgments
Results of this study were presented, in part, at the International Conference on Eating Disorders, May 2008, Seattle, WA.
Funding
This study was supported by a grant from the National Institutes of Health (NIH-R03MH074861) and by grants from the University of Missouri (PRIME Grant, Research Council Grant).