Critical Interventions Aimed to Reduce Body Dissatisfaction: The Way You Perceive Your Body Matters

Herceg, Lucijana and Clark, Mitchell (2020) Critical Interventions Aimed to Reduce Body Dissatisfaction: The Way You Perceive Your Body Matters. In: Modern Perspectives in Language, Literature and Education Vol. 2. B P International, pp. 149-161. ISBN 978-93-90516-02-5

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Abstract

Aims: To determine if brief interventions of cognitive dissonance, media literacy, and a mindful body
scan can reduce body dissatisfaction among female undergraduate students and whether
mindfulness, emotion regulation, positive and negative affect, and media literacy levels have an
impact on body appreciation.
Study Design: The present study used an experimental design and included three intervention
groups and an active control group.
Place and Duration of Study: Centre for Psychological Innovation at Mount Royal University in
Calgary, Alberta, Canada from January 17th to March 6th, 2020.
Methodology: 78 female participants between the ages of 17 to 49 years with a mean age of 21
years (SD = 5.16). All participants underwent a body dissatisfaction induction procedure and
completed self-report questionnaires on body satisfaction (using the Body Appreciation Scale),
mindfulness (using the Five Facet Mindfulness Scale), emotion regulation (using the Difficulties in
Emotion Regulation), positive and negative affect (using the Positive and Negative Affect Schedule),
and media literacy (using the Critically Thinking About Media Messages, Media Attitudes
Questionnaire, and the Sociocultural Attitudes Towards Appearance Questionnaire).
Results: Three separate multiple linear regression tests revealed that there were differences in the
variables predicting body appreciation scores at Time1, F(7, 70) = 12.09, p < .001, Time 2, F(7, 70) =
14.74, p< .001, and Time3, F(7, 70) = 15.07, p < .001. A one-way ANOVA revealed that body
appreciation scores increased for all four conditions after completion of the intervention, F(1, 76) =
.069, p = .793 but not after the body dissatisfaction induction procedure or before the intervention.
Conclusion: These findings confirm that negative affect and low levels of media literacy contribute to
feelings of body dissatisfaction and that brief periods of steering the mind away from the body lead to
increases in body appreciation. Future research should look at the effects of brief interventions on
body appreciation among men who idealize the muscular-ideal.

Item Type: Book Section
Subjects: Academic Digital Library > Social Sciences and Humanities
Depositing User: Unnamed user with email info@academicdigitallibrary.org
Date Deposited: 15 Nov 2023 04:27
Last Modified: 15 Nov 2023 04:27
URI: http://publications.article4sub.com/id/eprint/2850

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