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An Investigation of the Eating Concerns Scale of the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory-3 (MMPI-3) in a Postoperative Bariatric Surgery Sample.

Ryan J MarekKaty Martin-FernandezLeslie J HeinbergYossef S Ben-Porath
Published in: Obesity surgery (2020)
Eating pathology is common pre-operatively and continues to be prevalent following bariatric surgery. A new version of the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory (MMPI), the MMPI-3, contains a new scale called Eating Concerns (EAT) that aims to assess problematic eating behaviors. The current investigation seeks to establish preliminary convergent validity of the MMPI-3 EAT scale in a postoperative bariatric surgery sample. Thirty-eight consecutive participants took the MMPI-3 and the Eating Disorder Examination-Questionnaire (EDE-Q). Higher MMPI-3 EAT scale scores were meaningfully associated with %Weight Regain (r = .37) and scale scores on the EDE-Q [Eating Concerns (r = .67), Weight Concerns (r = .39), Shape Concerns (r = .54), and the EDE total score (r = .59)]. Initial examination of the EAT Specific Problem Scale of the MMPI-3 yields good clinical utility in assessing eating pathology in a postoperative bariatric surgery sample.
Keyphrases
  • weight loss
  • bariatric surgery
  • obese patients
  • gastric bypass
  • roux en y gastric bypass
  • physical activity
  • patients undergoing
  • psychometric properties
  • weight gain
  • cross sectional
  • body weight