Meta-analytic prospective associations between self-esteem and eating disorders appear to be spurious: A reanalysis and comment on Krauss et al. (2023)

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Abstract

In a recent meta-analysis, Krauss et al. (2023) found support for a reciprocal model of low self-esteem and eating disorders where, in a vicious circle, low self-esteem makes people more vulnerable to developing eating disorders and eating disorders, in turn, scars individuals’ self-esteem. However, the present reanalyses of the same meta-analytic data found the prospective decreasing effects between self-esteem and eating disorders to be spurious, probably due to correlations with residuals and regression to the mean. Consequently, the claims by Krauss et al. can be challenged. To avoid statistical artifacts, we recommend researchers to fit, as we did in the present study, competing models to their data in order to evaluate if prospective effects may be genuinely increasing or decreasing or if they appear to be spurious.

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europepmc
last seen: 2026-05-20T01:45:00.602351+00:00
unpaywall
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License: CC-BY-4.0