Motivation is an important predictor of change in anorexia nervosa and preliminary evidence is provided that motivation can be improved in this population. Further investigations, however, of ways of improving motivation in this population need to be conducted, along with the impact of motivational changes on treatment outcome.
This paper examines how contemporary understandings of 'health' and 'care' are engaged with and practiced by women with disordered eating. Based on findings from an Australian study investigating why people with disordered eating are reluctant to engage with treatment services (March 2012 to March 2015), we demonstrate how young women use elements of a 'health habitus' and 'care' to rationalise and justify their practices. Moving beyond Foucauldian theories of self-discipline and individual responsibility we argue that Bourdieu's concept of habitus and ethnographic concepts of care provide a deeper understanding of the ways in which people with disordered eating embody health practices as a form of care and distinction. We demonstrate how eating and bodily practices that entail 'natural', medical and ethical concerns (in particular, the new food regime known as orthorexia) are successfully incorporated into participants' eating disorder repertoires and embodied as a logic of care. Understanding how categories of health and care are tinkered with and practiced by people with disordered eating has important implications for health professionals, family members and peers engaging with and identifying people at all stages of help-seeking.
BackgroundThis paper explores the differing perspectives of recovery and care of people with disordered eating. We consider the views of those who have not sought help for their disordered eating, or who have been given a diagnosis but have not engaged with health care services. Our aim is to demonstrate the importance of the cultural context of care and how this might shape people’s perspectives of recovery and openness to receiving professional care.MethodThis study utilised a mixed methods approach of ethnographic fieldwork and psychological evaluation with 28 women from Adelaide, South Australia. Semi-structured interviews, observations, field notes and the Eating Disorder Examination were the primary forms of data collection. Data was analysed using thematic analysis.Results & DiscussionParticipants in our study described how their disordered eating afforded them safety and were consistent with cultural values concerning healthy eating and gendered bodies. Disordered eating was viewed as a form of self-care, in which people protect and ‘take care’ of themselves. These subjectively experienced understandings of care underlie eating disorder behaviours and provide an obstacle in seeking any form of treatment that might lead to recovery.ConclusionA shared understanding between patients and health professionals about the function of the eating disorder may avoid conflict and provide a pathway to treatment. These results suggest the construction of care by patients should not be taken for granted in therapeutic guidelines. A discussion considering how disordered eating practices are embedded in a matrix of care, health, eating and body practices may enhance the therapeutic relationship.
There has been a growing call for sociologically engaged research to better understand the complex processes underpinning Severe and Enduring Anorexia Nervosa (SE-AN). Based on a qualitative study with women in Adelaide, South Australia who were reluctant to seek help for their disordered eating practices, this paper draws on anthropological concepts of embodiment to examine how SE-AN is experienced as culturally grounded. We argue that experiences of SE-AN are culturally informed, and in turn, inform bodily perception and practice in the world. Over time, everyday rituals and routines became part of participants' habitus', experienced as taken-for-granted practices that structured lifeworlds. Here, culture and self are not separate, but intimately entangled in and through embodiment. Approaching SE-AN through a paradigm of embodiment has important implications for therapeutic models that attempt to move anorexia nervosa away from the body and separate it from the self in order to achieve recovery. Separating experiencesliterally disembodying anorexia nervosa-was described by participants as more than the loss of an identity; it would dismantle their sense of being-in-the-world. Understanding how SE-AN is itself a structure that structures every aspect of daily life, helps us to understand the fear of living differently, and the safety that embodied routines bring. We conclude by asking what therapeutic treatment might look like if we took embodiment as one orientation to SE-AN, and focused on quality of life and harm minimization.
The limitation of a patient-centered approach to the treatment of obsessive-compulsive disorders are underlined by the failure of modern behaviour therapy techniques to help usefully more than 50 per cent of patients. The concept of family homeostasis is discussed in relation to two cases of obsessive-compulsive neurosis which failed to respond to patient-centred treatment over several years. The successful treatment of these cases in a family context is described. It is suggested that the comparative success of behaviour therapy in treating obsessive-compulsive disorders, which were previously regarded as generally intractable, has encouraged the premature use of patient-orientated behavioural techniques in cases where family therapy may be more appropriate. Although there is evidence that helping the families of obsessive-compulsive patients to verbalise feelings facilitates symptomatic improvement, the precise mechanisms whereby improvement occurs require further elucidation.
This study examined whether: (1) brief training in motivational interviewing (MI) can prepare mental health nurses (MHNs) to provide MI to patients; and (2) this MI impacts on patients with respect to premature discharge. Six MHNs on an inpatient eating disorder unit were trained in MI, and their treatment adherence and competence were evaluated at post-training and 2-month follow-up. Premature discharge was examined by comparing a 3-month period in 2009 before MI administration with 2010 when MI was being administered. MHNs significantly improved their MI adherence and competence. Satisfaction with the training was high as was patient satisfaction with MI. Premature discharge rates significantly decreased. Brief training in MI is sufficient to significantly increase competency and adherence in the practice of MI by MHNs, which may in turn be effective in improving patients' treatment adherence by reducing premature discharge rates. Future research will need to utilize a randomized controlled design in order to further investigate these findings.
Only 61% of adults being treated for anorexia nervosa (AN) were willing to allow their carer to be contacted by researchers in order to ask them to complete questionnaires over the duration of treatment and follow-up. Significant reductions in eating psychopathology from those being treated for AN was followed by significant reductions in their carers' distress some 12 months later. Reductions of carers' distress was associated with only a small effect size and may indicate that more clinically significant reductions requires individualised support for the carers. Carers whose significant other had a lower body mass index at baseline received most benefit in terms of symptom reduction at 12-month follow-up, which may indicate a need to clarify a carer's expectations of the recovery process.
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