The role of hurtful and healing messages on eating disorder symptomology and recovery

Victoria Orrego Dunleavy, E. Malova
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

This study analyzed how clinically diagnosed women with eating disorders described the hurtful messages from parents, siblings, and peers that triggered eating disorder symptomology as well as the healing messages that assisted with coping and recovery. Three themes overlapping across all groups were revealed for hurtful messages: 1) critical, 2) social modeling, and 3) direct comparison. Our findings show that fathers, siblings, and peers similarly used teasing. Other points of distinction were uncovered for fathers: aggressive messages and denial of eating disorder. Competition with female siblings and friends was also a triggering factor for young females with eating disorders. Four distinct categories of healing messages were identified: 1) emotional, 2) instrumental, 3) informational, and 4) appraisal. Point of distinction for friends’ and siblings’ healing messages was absence of negative comments about weight and appearance. Results were able to encapsulate both helpful/supportive and hurtful/unsupportive messages, and these findings will be helpful for treatment centers who may incorporate them in recovery programs.
伤害和愈合信息在饮食失调症状和恢复中的作用
这项研究分析了临床诊断为饮食失调的女性如何描述来自父母、兄弟姐妹和同龄人的伤害信息,这些信息引发了饮食失调的症状,以及帮助她们应对和恢复的治愈信息。在所有组中,有三个重叠的主题揭示了有害信息:1)批评,2)社会模型和3)直接比较。我们的研究结果表明,父亲、兄弟姐妹和同龄人都有类似的戏弄行为。研究还发现了父亲的其他区别:攻击性信息和否认饮食失调。与女性兄弟姐妹和朋友的竞争也是引发年轻女性饮食失调的一个因素。治疗信息有四种不同的类型:1)情感信息,2)工具性信息,3)信息性信息,4)评价信息。朋友和兄弟姐妹的治愈信息的区别在于没有关于体重和外貌的负面评论。结果能够包含有益/支持和伤害/不支持的信息,这些发现将有助于治疗中心将其纳入康复计划。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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