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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2010 Mar 1.
Published in final edited form as: Int J Eat Disord. 2009 Mar;42(2):173–178. doi: 10.1002/eat.20600

Table 2.

Survival analysis predicting time to remission of binge eating and compensatory behaviors

Predictors of remission of binge eating for at least 4 months
Predictor B Inverse HR 95% CI for Hazard Ratio p
T1 Dietary restraint −.25 1.29 .92–1.81 .14
T1 Depressive symptoms −.52 1.70 .75–3.82 .20
T1 Thin ideal internalization −.45 1.57 1.09–2.27 .02
T1 Body satisfaction .04 .96 .67–1.38 .84
T1 Hunger −.31 1.36 .98–1.88 .06
T1 Expectation that food is rewarding −.46 1.58 1.08–2.33 .02
T1 Expectation that food reduces negative mood −.15 1.16 .81–1.67 .41
T1 Binge eating frequency −.61 1.84 1.05–3.23 .03
T1 Compensatory behavior frequency −.25 1.28 .64–2.59 .49

Predictors of remission of compensatory behaviors for at least 4 months
T1 Dietary restraint −.56 1.75 1.21–2.49 .002
T1 Depressive symptoms −.51 1.67 .68–4.06 .26
T1 Thin ideal internalization −.31 1.36 .93–2.00 .11
T1 Body satisfaction −.06 1.06 .72–1.57 .75
T1 Hunger .07 1.07 .74–1.54 .72
T1 Expectation that food is rewarding .17 .84 .58–1.24 .36
T1 Expectation that food reduces negative mood −.24 1.22 .87–1.87 .22
T1 Binge eating frequency −.27 1.31 .81–2.12 .27
T1 Compensatory behavior frequency −1.30 3.65 1.01–13.16 .05