Emotional Eating: A Virtually Untreated Risk Factor for Outcome Following Bariatric Surgery

Empirical investigations implicate emotional eating (EE) in dysfunctional eating behavior such as uncontrolled overeating and insufficient weight loss following bariatric surgery. They demonstrate that EE may be a conscious or reflexive behavior motivated by multiple negative emotions and/or feeling...

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Main Author: Betty E. Chesler
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2012-01-01
Series:The Scientific World Journal
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1100/2012/365961
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author Betty E. Chesler
author_facet Betty E. Chesler
author_sort Betty E. Chesler
collection DOAJ
description Empirical investigations implicate emotional eating (EE) in dysfunctional eating behavior such as uncontrolled overeating and insufficient weight loss following bariatric surgery. They demonstrate that EE may be a conscious or reflexive behavior motivated by multiple negative emotions and/or feelings of distress about loss-of-control eating. EE, however, has not been targeted in pre- or postoperative interventions or examined as an explanatory construct for failed treatment of dysfunctional eating. Three cases suggest that cognitive behavioral treatment (CBT) might alleviate EE. One describes treatment for distress provoked by loss-of-control eating. The first of two others, associated with negative emotions/life situations, link treatment of a super-super-preoperative obese individual’s reflexive EE with 52% excess BMI (body mass index) loss maintained for the past year, 64 months after surgery. The second relates treatment of conscious/reflexive EE with 84.52% excess BMI loss 53 months after surgery. Implications for research and treatment are discussed.
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spelling doaj-art-d1d53d3ec28d4f0fb94c027db257dba42025-02-03T01:22:48ZengWileyThe Scientific World Journal1537-744X2012-01-01201210.1100/2012/365961365961Emotional Eating: A Virtually Untreated Risk Factor for Outcome Following Bariatric SurgeryBetty E. Chesler0Private Practice, 6315 Forbes Avenue, Pittsburgh, PA 15217, USAEmpirical investigations implicate emotional eating (EE) in dysfunctional eating behavior such as uncontrolled overeating and insufficient weight loss following bariatric surgery. They demonstrate that EE may be a conscious or reflexive behavior motivated by multiple negative emotions and/or feelings of distress about loss-of-control eating. EE, however, has not been targeted in pre- or postoperative interventions or examined as an explanatory construct for failed treatment of dysfunctional eating. Three cases suggest that cognitive behavioral treatment (CBT) might alleviate EE. One describes treatment for distress provoked by loss-of-control eating. The first of two others, associated with negative emotions/life situations, link treatment of a super-super-preoperative obese individual’s reflexive EE with 52% excess BMI (body mass index) loss maintained for the past year, 64 months after surgery. The second relates treatment of conscious/reflexive EE with 84.52% excess BMI loss 53 months after surgery. Implications for research and treatment are discussed.http://dx.doi.org/10.1100/2012/365961
spellingShingle Betty E. Chesler
Emotional Eating: A Virtually Untreated Risk Factor for Outcome Following Bariatric Surgery
The Scientific World Journal
title Emotional Eating: A Virtually Untreated Risk Factor for Outcome Following Bariatric Surgery
title_full Emotional Eating: A Virtually Untreated Risk Factor for Outcome Following Bariatric Surgery
title_fullStr Emotional Eating: A Virtually Untreated Risk Factor for Outcome Following Bariatric Surgery
title_full_unstemmed Emotional Eating: A Virtually Untreated Risk Factor for Outcome Following Bariatric Surgery
title_short Emotional Eating: A Virtually Untreated Risk Factor for Outcome Following Bariatric Surgery
title_sort emotional eating a virtually untreated risk factor for outcome following bariatric surgery
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1100/2012/365961
work_keys_str_mv AT bettyechesler emotionaleatingavirtuallyuntreatedriskfactorforoutcomefollowingbariatricsurgery