Eating behaviour - AN - FST Explanation Flashcards

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1
Q

how many people suffer with anorexia nervosa?

A

0.3-1.2%

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2
Q

what are the symptoms of AN?

A

refusal to eat, distorted body image, self-disgust, food-related anxiety

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3
Q

what characteristics make up an ‘anorexic’ family?

A

enmeshment
rigidity
conflict avoidance
overprotectiveness

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4
Q

who devised the family systems theory explanation of anorexia and when?

A

minuchin 1978

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5
Q

what is enmeshment?

A
  • anorexic families are overly involved with each other
  • poorly defined roles
  • lack of alone time and privacy
  • self identities of families become entangled
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6
Q

what are the challenges for daughters in emeshed families?

A

struggles to insert independence and differentiating her identity from everyone, especially her mother.

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7
Q

describe overprotectiveness in anorexic families

A
  • constantly trying to protect each other from external threats
  • nurture each other obsessively so there’s no room for independence
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8
Q

describe rigidity in an anorexic family?

A

-inflexible interactions
- members deny the need for change
- cant adapt to knew things

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9
Q

how can rigidity explain the development of anorexia?

A
  • the daughter cannot be independent and do her own things
  • the mother moves to squash the daughters attempt at self-differentiation
  • this means she seeks control in her eating and trys to break the rigidty by changing her eating habbits (not eating)
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10
Q

describe conflict avoidance

A
  • avoid arguments and conflict
  • suppress arguments if they occur
    -issues will not be resolved and continue to fester
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11
Q

how does conflict avoidance aid the development of anorexia

A

the daughter continues to not eat as the family refuses to accept there is a problem to discuss

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12
Q

describe the role of autonomy and control in the development of anorexia

A
  • daughter struggles to gain control she desires in the anorexic family
  • this leads to confusion in the daughter because she is not given the autonomy and control she needs
  • so she starves herself, subconsciously
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13
Q

why does the daughter starve herself according to FST

A
  • its an attempt to separate herself from the family and become her own person
  • she has a new sense of control in her body
  • weight loss is a visible measure of success
  • she also gets to distance from her mother by disrupting the relationship
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14
Q

what is the behaviour of the mother in FST?

A

domineering, intrusive and doesn’t accept daughters need for separation

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15
Q

in what ways is the daughters confusion expressed?

A
  • distorted body image
  • inability to feel internal body states such as hunger
  • feelings of loss of control
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16
Q

overall what is FST?

A
  • AN develops due to dysfunctional interactions between family members and a need for control and autonomit from the daughter
17
Q

a01 summary

A
  1. minuchin 1978 - dysfunctional famalies
  2. enmenshment - why lead to anorexia
  3. rigidty - why lead to anorexia
  4. over portectiveness - why lead to anoerxia
  5. conflict avoidance - why cause anorexia
  6. role of the mother
  7. the need for control and autonomy