Stress, Adaptive Coping, and Life Satisfaction

The authors examined the relationship between stress, adaptive coping, and life satisfaction among college students who reported having a friend or family member with eating disorder symptomatology. A hierarchical regression confirmed the study's hypotheses. Higher stress was linked with less l...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of college counseling 2017-10, Vol.20 (3), p.224-236
Hauptverfasser: Buser, Juleen K., Kearney, Anne
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container_title Journal of college counseling
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creator Buser, Juleen K.
Kearney, Anne
description The authors examined the relationship between stress, adaptive coping, and life satisfaction among college students who reported having a friend or family member with eating disorder symptomatology. A hierarchical regression confirmed the study's hypotheses. Higher stress was linked with less life satisfaction. After stress was controlled, plan coping had a beneficial influence on life satisfaction. College counselors can use these findings when choosing interventions for clients who are close to someone with an eating disorder.
doi_str_mv 10.1002/jocc.12071
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source Education Source; Alma/SFX Local Collection
subjects College Students
Coping
Correlation
eating disorder
Eating Disorders
Family (Sociological Unit)
Friendship
Hypothesis Testing
Life Satisfaction
Regression (Statistics)
School Counseling
stress
Stress Variables
Symptoms (Individual Disorders)
title Stress, Adaptive Coping, and Life Satisfaction
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