Abstract

PurposeAccording to the current state of research, mental health improves due to bariatric surgery. However, improvements in weight and psychosocial aspects often show a gradual decline with time. As emotion regulation (ER) appears to be a key variable in the successful outcome of weight loss treatments, the present study aimed at investigating ER-strategies applied by bariatric surgery candidates pre- and post-surgery and examining interactions between ER, depressive symptoms, health-related quality of life (HrQoL), and post-surgical weight loss.MethodsPrior to and 6 months after bariatric surgery, 45 patients (76% women) completed self-report questionnaires assessing depressive symptoms (Beck Depression Inventory-II), HrQoL (Short Form-36 Health Survey), and ER-strategies (Emotion Regulation Inventory for Negative Emotions).ResultsSix months post-surgery, the patients reported significant improvements in depressive symptomatology, HrQoL, and satisfaction with ER compared to pre-surgery. Groups differing in their course of ER-satisfaction also differed in psychosocial dimensions pre- to post-surgery, increased satisfaction being related to less impairment and enhanced communication of negative emotions as a form of an adaptive regulation. Patients with higher weight loss applied the strategy of controlled expression more frequently post-surgery than pre-surgery and compared to patients with lower weight loss.ConclusionsPostoperative weight loss leads to improvements in ER-satisfaction and mental well-being. As satisfaction with ER seems to be associated with less impaired mental well-being among bariatric surgery candidates, presumably even more positive psychosocial outcomes could be obtained post-surgery by implementing trainings explicitly encouraging the use of adaptive ER-strategies.

Highlights

  • Morbid obesity is increasing faster than any other disease worldwide

  • Individuals reported significantly fewer depressive symptoms and improvements in health-related quality of life (HrQoL); the mental component summary score (MCS) of the SF-36 was found to be lower than the physical component summary score (PCS) post-surgery

  • While studies indicate a deterioration of the MCS with time after an initial improvement [13, 16], the present study suggests that patients already find it harder to recover from the psychosocial than physical consequences of obesity in the first place

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Summary

Introduction

Morbid obesity is increasing faster than any other disease worldwide. It is associated with an elevated risk of morbidity and mortality as well as impaired mental well-being [1]. Highly prevalent among obese individuals with a rate twice to five times as high as in the population with BMI

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