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Psychological Aspects of Eating Disorders. Sally Schwab, Ph.D., MSW Director, Primary Care Faculty Development and Curriculum New York Medical College. Eating Disorders. Affect between 5 to 10 million people in the US Approximately 5 -10% of people with eating disorders will die
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Psychological Aspects of Eating Disorders Sally Schwab, Ph.D., MSW Director, Primary Care Faculty Development and Curriculum New York Medical College
Eating Disorders • Affect between 5 to 10 million people in the US • Approximately 5 -10% of people with eating disorders will die • Untreated, 18 -20% of people with AN will die within 20 years • ED’s have one of the highest mortality rates of any psychiatric illness • Disorders of control not food
Pediatric Eating Disorders • Have been largely ignored • Pts with AN and BN often become symptomatic in childhood & adolescence • Largest increase in ED’s seen in minorities, children and males • AN third most common chronic illness in adols after obesity & asthma
Infancy • Difficulties in feeding • Failure to thrive • physical abnormalities • developmental delay (cognitive or genetic disorders) • parental mental illness • temperamental mismatch
Toddlers • Transition between parental feeding and self -feeding • continuum of normal, picky and anorectic eaters • separation issues • anorectic toddlers have higher temperament ratings on difficulty, irregularity, negativity, dependence • These mothers have greater attachment insecurity
School-Aged Children • Kids compare themselves to others • AN can develop in childhood • BN usually develops after puberty • Pica in childhood related to BN • Picky eating related more to AN • Can see excess exercise, talk of dieting and desire to be thin and beautiful.
School-aged • Boys and girls 7 - 11 rate obese children as; • having fewer friends • being less liked by parents, • doing less well at school • being lazier • being less happy • being less attractive
School-aged • Gender differences emerge between 8-10 • Body dissatisfaction, esp. for girls, becomes more pronounced with age • 1989 CDC study: desire to be thinner increased from 40% in grade 3 to 79% in grade 6
Role of parents • Parent’s concerns about own weight affect boys and girls • Maternal and paternal overeating, body dissatisfaction and bulimic symptoms predicted secretive eating in children • Maternal /paternal dieting and behavior predicted overeating in children
Anorexia Nervosa (AN) and Bulimia Nervosa (BN) • Inability to distinguish physiological sensations of hunger and fullness from emotional feelings • View body as something to be controlled by the mind • I feel fat, therefore I am worthless • I feel thin, therefore I am good
DSM-PC/DSM-IV criteria for AN: Dieting/Body Image Variation • Dieting may occur if child is overweight, but be realistic • Does not completely eliminate any food group, but decreases food intake • Child favors thin appearance but has realistic image • Child can stop dieting voluntarily
DSM-PC/DSM-IV criteria for AN: Dieting/body image problem • Dieting is more restrictive & results in weight loss during growth periods • Person starts to become obsessed with pursuit of thinness and has fears of gaining weight • Begins to develop a consistent disturbance in body perception and starts to deny weight loss is a problem
Anorexia Nervosa (DSM IV) • Refusal to maintain body weight at or above minimally normal weight • Body weight <85% of that expected • Intense fear of weight gain, becoming fat , even though underweight • Disturbance in way weight is experienced
Anorexia Nervosa (DSM IV) • Denial of the seriousness of low body weight • Undue influence of body weight on self-evaluation • Absence of at least 3 consecutive menstrual cycles • Restricting type: no regular binge /purge • Bingeing/purge type: regular binge/purge
Clinical Red Flags: AN • Ritualistic eating habits, such as cutting up meat in very small bites • Refusal to eat in front of others • Suddenly deciding to become a vegetarian, or eating low / no-fat foods • Continual exercising • Hypersensitivity to cold • Wearing layers of clothes
DSM-PC/DSM-IV criteria: Purging/Binge Eating- variation • Occasional overeating or perception of overeating, either objective /subjective binges occurs. • Intermittent concern about body image or getting fat when too much food is eaten. Not pervasive, doesn’t change eating patterns • Normal weight gain is present
DSM-PC/DSM-IV criteria: Purging/ Binge-Eating problem • Experimentation with vomiting, laxatives, fasting, or exercise to prevent weight gain • Isolated episodes far apart in time • Increased episodes of uncontrolled eating & perception of body becomes more distorted • Not sufficient to qualify for bulimia
Bulimia Nervosa (DSM - IV) • Recurrent episodes of binge eating: • Eating, in a discrete period of time (e.g. within 2 hr period), an amount of food that is definitely larger than most people would eat during that time • Sense of lack of control over eating during the episode (feeling like one can not stop eating or control what or how much one is eating
Bulimia Nervosa (DSM - IV) • Recurrent inappropriate compensatory behavior to prevent weight gain: • self-induced vomiting • misuse of laxatives, diuretics, enemas or other medications; fasting, excessive exercise • Binge /purge occurs, on average 2 x week for 3 months
Bulimia Nervosa (DSM - IV) • Self-evaluation is unduly influenced by body shape and weight • Does not occur exclusively during episodes of anorexia nervosa • Purging type • Non-purging type
Clinical Red Flags: BN • Normal-weight adolescents often make excuses to go to the bathroom after meals • Mood swings • Buying large amount of food, which suddenly disappear (hoarding) • Unusual swelling around jaw • Eating large amounts of food on spur of moment • Laxatives or diuretic wrappers found in trash
Binge Eating Disorder (BED) • Patients binge but do NOT purge • 2 x week for 6 months • Frequent failed attempts at dieting • Eat alone due to embarrassment about weight/restricts activities due to shame • Often overweight • Feels tormented by eating habits • Failures attributed to weight
Severe disturbances in eating behavior Intense fear of being fat Distorted thinking Disturbance in perception of shape Self-esteem highly dependent on weight Control of food = control of world Way to manage anxiety; rigid and ritualistic Secretive Weight gain = “bad”, no control Weight loss = “good”, in control; measure of achievement As weight decreases, concern about weight increases Collect recipes/ cook for others Obsessively weigh themselves; exercise Characteristics of ED Patients
Distorted thinking • Filtering: magnify the negative • Polarization: Things are good or bad • Expecting disaster • Personalization • Over generalizing • Control fallacies: you feel externally controlled • Shoulds: iron clad rules about how to act
perfectionist high achievers intense neediness emotionally inhibited need for control feel ineffective lack of insight fear maturity/ struggle for autonomy fear separation sexuality self-regulatory problems with anxiety social discomfort sensitivity to reflection / self critical high academic expectations self-mutilation impulsive behaviors shop lifting, promiscuity Personality features AN BN
Between 50-69% normal weight dissatisfied 16% underweight want to be thinner Parents focus on physical appearance Decreased body satisfaction after puberty Dislike of thighs,buttocks, stomach 21% think they are underweight 10% think overweight Parents focus on physical functioning Increased body satisfaction after puberty Desire to be biggerand taller Gender Differences Girls Boys
Gender differences • Girls tend to use more social comparisons which increase body dissatisfaction and dieting behaviors • Boys are less influenced by socio-cultural pressures than girls • Girls tend to describe themselves more negatively
Gender differences • Physical attractiveness often predicts self-concept and self-esteem in girls • Physical effectiveness predicts self-concept in boys (strength, sports) • When girls are praised for attractiveness, they begin to overvalue their physical attributes and invest more self-worth in matters related to appearance • Physically attractive girls are more preoccupied with weight (beauty =curse)
Sociocultural Gender Puberty Ethnicity SES status 2oth century ideal is “thin and light” Intense focus on physical appearance of girls Associated with increased body weight and fat Subcultural differences Desire for thinness correlated with higher ses Factors Affecting Body Image
Western ideal = thin Non-Western cultures - obesity is often admired Women believe they are more attractive to men if thin NOT substantiated by men Studies show men’s stated preference of female weight was significantly greater than the women’s assessment of selves Cultural Issues
Ethnic Differences • African American girls seem more satisfied with weight; prefer heavier ideal. • African American girls more affected by mothers’ influence, whereas whites more affected by peers. • Binge eating more frequent in Asians and less frequent in blacks. • Hispanics reported more use of laxatives and diuretics to lose weight
More than 50% of women in U.S. diet 15% of all women medical students have lifelong hx of ED > 90% are women > 95% are white > 75% are adolescents when first dx 2/3 of high school students report being on a diet when only 20% were overweight Most from mid - upper SES Epidemiology
Epidemiology • Third most common chronic illness in adolescent women is AN • Mortality is reported to be about 6% • 1997 Youth Risk Behavior Study by CDC reports: • 30% of high school students are dieting • 4.9% use diet pills • 4.5% induced vomiting or use laxatives
Prevalence in Males • Of AN patients, 5% - 10% are men • One study of Navy men reports 2.5% prevalence of AN, 6.8% of BN and 40% of binge eating • A study of civilian men report of those with ED , 42% are homosexual or bisexual while 58% with AN are asexual
Epidemiology • Occurs in .5% - 3% of all teenagers • Prevalence in U.S. of AN is .5% - 1% • 1/3 of insulin dependent females with diabetes suffer from an ED • Peak onset of AN: • 13 -14 : puberty • and 17 -18: leaving home / identity formation
Prevalence of bulimia • Up to 25% of adolescents have at some time engaged in purging to control weight • Between 4% - 10% of older adolescents and college age women develop BN • Mean age of onset: 18.4 years of age • peak of sexual maturity and body image dissatisfaction.
Who may be at risk? • Physically active people: competitive athletes: skaters, gymnasts, dancers, runners • 15%-60% estimated prevalence • Male wrestlers and rowers • 1/3 of high school wrestlers use method of “weight-cutting”: food restriction, fluid depletion using steam rooms, saunas, diuretics (often resume normal eating off season but maintain up to only 3% body fat)
Female Athlete • Female athlete triad • Menstrual dysfunction • Eating disorders • Osteoporosis
At risk... • Higher incidence for men and women in military • Greater risk for girls who undergo early puberty • Patients with a family history of ED • Vegetarians among adolescents: • twice as likely to diet frequently • four times as likely to intensively diet • eight times as likely to use laxatives as their non-vegetarian peers
Body Image Disturbance • Body image disturbance gets WORSE with weight loss • As the typical teenage girl loses weight, she becomes more satisfied • As teenage girl developing AN loses weight, she becomes less satisfied and resets her initial goal
Body Image • The way one experiences one’s body • Girls who have greater self-confidence and positive self-esteem more likely to have secure, healthy body image • Two basic dimensions • Body satisfaction • Body size perception
How a person feels and acts about their size and appearance Personal meaning and feeling are associated with the body I’m inferior because I’m fat Estimation of one’s size, but also distorted perception that the body is far from the idealized standard The way one sees themselves and the way they think others see them Body Satisfaction Body Size Perception(Affective) (Cognitive)
Displacement of Feelings • I am depressed and I really feel fat • No boy asked me out because I am fat • Bad things happen to me because I am fat • Goal: separate body image issues from other emotional aspects of one’s life • Correlation between weight loss and happiness is illusory
Dangers for Future • Never learn how to cope with real issues • Will always blame body when relationships fail • Unrealistic expectations get set up • Always tries hard to please others; overlook own needs
Precipitating Factors • dieting prompted by plumpness • being teased about weight • depression or seasonal onset • feeling lack of control in one’s life • interpersonal conflict /first sexual experience • developmental tasks of transition • separations
Inadequate coping skills in response to: • Puberty • separation - leaving home to college • stress • pressure for high achievement • regulation of tension / anxiety • sexual trauma
Characteristics of a binge • ingestion of between 5,000 - 20,000 calories per episode (within 2 hours) • continual snacking on small amounts during day is NOT a binge • food often is high caloric and carbos • usually occurs in secret • continues until uncomfortably full, is interrupted or run out of food
Bingeing and Purging • 80-90% of bulimics induce vomiting • vomiting often a goal in itself • induce with fingers or instruments • first eat “marker” food, so when purge will know all is gone • develop ability to vomit at will • could use up to 100 laxatives/diuretics per day
Binges triggered by: • dysphoric mood states • interpersonal stressors • intense hunger following dietary restraint • negative feelings related to weight
During a Binge... • Feel lack of control • In a dissociative state • Feeling of “frenzied” • Feeling of relief • Average binge/purge episodes - 14 times a week • Most don’t want to give it up