Eating Disorders Flashcards
What is the Spectrum hypothesis?
Posits that eating disorders (specific bulimia and anorexia) are one syndrome with different manifestations
What is one feature that distinguishes bulimia from anorexia?
Impulsivity (e.g. sexual promiscuity, suicide attempts, drug abuse, and stealing/shoplifting) is frequently noted in bulimia patients. “bulimics are failed anorexics”
What is the ratio of bulimics to anorexics?
2:1
How do the treatment seeking attitudes compare for bulimics and anorexics?
Bulimics are more likely to present themselves for treatment as the binge/purge cycle is extremely disturbing to them. Anorexics are frequently indifferent to their disorder and will only get treatment if referred by a loved one who is concerned for their life.
What is the prognosis for eating disorders?
There is no easy treatment. About 1/3 of patients continue to meet diagnostic criteria 5 years and longer after initial treatment. Estimates of mortality including suicide rates range from 5%-8%.
According to Polivy & Herman, what are the main obstacles to explaining why people have eating disorders?
It is impossible to conduct true experimental research in which a putative causal factor is manipulated, it is difficult to combine all these factors into a model that is not unwieldy, and it is difficult to find suitable samples of eating disorder patients, which has led to many studies that examine correlates of ED symptoms in normal populations.
Some claim that idealized media images are to blame for eating disorders. According to Polivy and Herman, what are some arguments against this claim?
It is difficult to weigh the relative importance of peer influence against family influence and media influence since they all teach the same lessons. Also, culture may not necessarily compel females more than males to be thin, females may just be more attentive to these messages.
What are 3 family influences on eating disorders?
- Eating disordered families are enmeshed, intrusive, hostile, & negating of the patients’ emotional needs. Insecure attachment is common.
- Adolescents who perceive family communications, parental caring and expectations as low and those who report sexual/physical abuse are at increased risk for developing EDs.
- Bulimia patients also report greater parental intrusiveness, specifically, maternal invasion of privacy, jealousy & competition, as well as paternal seductiveness.
What are 3 characteristics of mothers of children with eating disorders?
- They think their daughters should lose more weight and describe them as less attractive than comparison moms or the girls themselves.
- They are more dissatisfied with the general functioning of the family system
- They are themselves more eating disordered than moms of girls who don’t have EDs
What percentage of children of mothers with eating disorders have psychiatric disorders?
50%
What are 2 methodological limitations of studies on family influence on eating disorders?
Most studies are correlational and retrospective questioning is frequently used, both of which undermine certainty about the causal relationship between family dysfunction and EDs
According to Polivy & Herman, what is the relationship between childhood sexual abuse and eating disorders?
There is a connection between childhood sex abuse and bulimia symptoms. EDs may serve as a desperate attempt to regulate overwhelming negative emotions and construct a sense of self in the absence of internal structures. The refocus to body shape weight and eating can enable one to regain some emotional control.
Episodes of binging and purging may _______ anxiety and depression in bulimics.
reduce
What is the relationship between self-esteem, and bulimia?
Self-esteem moderates the relationship between [perfectionism and feeling overweight] and bulimic symptoms. Women with high self-esteem and the same diathesis-stress conditions are less likely to exhibit bulimic symptoms.
According to Polivy and Herman, what are some problems with conducting research on biological risk factors for EDs?
- The assessment of many of these risk factors is often too costly & invasive to be done in prospective studies w/large nonclinical samples.
- No good empirical studies on genes