2023
Distinguishing probable atypical anorexia nervosa from weight loss alone in a national sample of U.S. Military Veterans: Disentangling the roles of weight suppression and cognitive concerns
Neff K, Buta E, Fenn L, Ramsey C, Snow J, Haskell S, Masheb R. Distinguishing probable atypical anorexia nervosa from weight loss alone in a national sample of U.S. Military Veterans: Disentangling the roles of weight suppression and cognitive concerns. International Journal Of Eating Disorders 2023, 57: 827-838. PMID: 38129986, DOI: 10.1002/eat.24116.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchAtypical anorexia nervosaAtypical ANWeight suppressionAnorexia nervosaClinical entityWeight lossControl groupDietary restraintMental healthDistinct clinical entityPoor mental healthOnly groupU.S. military veteransClinical significanceHigh riskVeteran populationSecondary analysisWeight gainSpecialized interventionsMilitary veteransNervosaDisordersVeteransNational studyPathology
1999
Shame and its psychopathologic correlates in two women’s health problems: Binge eating disorder and vulvodynia
Masheb R, Grilo CM, Brondolo E. Shame and its psychopathologic correlates in two women’s health problems: Binge eating disorder and vulvodynia. Eating And Weight Disorders - Studies On Anorexia, Bulimia And Obesity 1999, 4: 187-193. PMID: 10728180, DOI: 10.1007/bf03339735.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsBinge Eating DisorderHealth problemsVulvodynia groupMedical conditionsAdditional comparison groupWomen's health problemsPsychopathologic correlatesStudy groupNon-patient controlsControl groupAdult womenVulvodyniaBED groupComparison groupEating DisordersHigh levelsDisordersCommunity sampleGroupGreater shame