Stress, coping, and crisis support in eating disorders
โ Scribed by Troop, Nicholas A. ;Holbrey, Alison ;Treasure, Janet L.
- Publisher
- Wiley (John Wiley & Sons)
- Year
- 1998
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 154 KB
- Volume
- 24
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0276-3478
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
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 the importance of the relationship between the individual and the particular problematic situation and yet most studies investigating coping in eating disorders have failed to measure situation-specific coping.
Method:
The present study used semistructured interviews to measure coping and crisis support in response to severe events and/or marked difficulties in 12 women with anorexia nervosa (an), 21 women with bulimia nervosa (bn), and 21 women without an eating disorder (non-ed).
Results:
Women with eating disorders were more likely to use cognitive avoidance or cognitive rumination and were less likely to downplay their problems. in addition, bn subjects were more likely to blame themselves and were less likely to receive crisis support from a core-tie. overall, women with eating disorders were less likely to be masterful in response to crises than women without eating disorders.
Discussion:
It is concluded that women with eating disorders are less effective in their coping than women without eating disorders.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Objective: This study explored the relationship between stressors and disturbed eating attitudes among adolescent females, assessing the moderating role of coping and the mediating influence of poor self-esteem. ## Method: Two hundred eighty-six teenage girls were recruited from local schools,
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 poss
Four cases demonstrate the intensification of distress when coping triggers panic and pathological eating. In all four cases, eating-disordered patients attempt to alleviate panic with food, and instead exacerbate both the panic and eating disorder symptomatology. Implications for the assessment and