Intergenerational transmission of war experiences was assessed using a modified Stroop task. Adult children of war veterans and those of nonveterans named the colors in which war related words were printed. They also named the colors of neutral, positive, and OCD related words in addition to color n
The inter-generational transmission of eating disorders
โ Scribed by Patricia J. Whitehouse; Gillian Harris
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1998
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 113 KB
- Volume
- 6
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1072-4133
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
A self-perpetuating cycle has been implicated between early childhood feeding problems and later eating disorders; between parental management style and eating disorders in the child; and between the way a mother was raised and her own parenting behaviour. Questionnaires were distributed to all nurseries in a discrete area of the West Midlands, to elicit information about both nursery-school children's eating behaviour, and the eating attitudes and management style of their primary caregiver. Comparisons were made between the eating behaviour of children whose caregiver showed evidence of abnormal eating attitudes, as demonstrated by their scores on BITE and EAT-26, and that of a control group drawn from the same population. Food refusal and fussiness were hypothesized to be orthogonal dimensions of eating behaviour in the child. Food refusal signiยฎcantly correlated with the management style of mealtimes when there was evidence of disordered eating in the caregiver, and co-varied with the caregiver's eating attitudes. Food fussiness was seen to be relatively stable across groups, but correlated with the management style of caregivers. This supports the hypothesis that food refusal and food fussiness are distinct behaviours, rather than degrees of the same behaviour. *
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Objective: To see whether patients with eating disorders consult general practitioners more frequently than control subjects and, if so, to describe the pattern of consultation. ## Method: General practitioner case record review of patients with anorexia nervosa, bulimia nervosa, and partial s
Objective: The clinical features of binge eating disorder (BED) are not well established. Therefore, a comprehensive assessment of the specific psychopathology of BED as compared to anorexia nervosa (AN) and bulimia nervosa (BN) is warranted. This comparison was the aim of the present study. Method:
Of 401 women who initially completed the EDI, 282 (70.3%) completed the ED1 again 1 year later. Pearson correlations calculated between the ED1 total score and its eight subscale scores indicate considerable stability in the total score and the Drive for Thinness, Body Dissatisfaction, Ineffectivene