Eating disorders as coping strategies: a critique
✍ Scribed by Nicholas A. Troop
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1998
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 68 KB
- Volume
- 6
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1072-4133
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
An association between eating disorder symptoms and stress has been observed in a number of studies in both laboratory and clinical settings. A popular conclusion has been that eating disorder symptoms may represent a coping strategy. However, since coping is a part of the stress process, it is possible that many authors have confounded this process (i.e. stress) with the outcome (i.e. eating disorder). Suggestions that eating disorders are coping strategies are discussed in terms of a precise de®nition of coping. Symptoms can only be considered as coping strategies if they are goal-directed and motivated by the wish to in¯uence stress levels. Although it is suggested that eating disorders are unlikely to be coping strategies at their onset, they may acquire functional status by reinforcement, although this still does not mean that they are necessarily coping strategies. It is suggested that the view of eating disorders as coping may simply be a modern causal explanation of symptoms. The advantages and disadvantages of such a casual explanation for clinical practice are discussed.
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## Objective: Recent research has supported the role of stress in the development and maintenance of eating disorders. however, coping and crisis support, important aspects of this stress process, have received little systematic attention. the cognitive-transactional approach to coping emphasizes t