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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Social Difficulties As Risk and Maintaining Factors in Anorexia Nervosa: A Mixed-Method Investigation
Valentina CardiNúria Mallorqui-bagueNúria Mallorqui-bagueGaia AlbanoGaia AlbanoAlessio Maria MonteleoneFernando Fernandez-arandaFernando Fernandez-arandaJanet Treasuresubject
050103 clinical psychologySocial adjustmentFear of negative evaluationlcsh:RC435-571media_common.quotation_subjectEnergy (esotericism)SubmissiveneAnorexia nervosaFear of negative evaluationBurdensomeness03 medical and health sciencesSocialProblemes socials0302 clinical medicineSubmissivenessSettore M-PSI/08 - Psicologia Clinicalcsh:PsychiatryAnorexia nervosa Burdensomeness Fear of negative evaluation Social Submissivenessmedicine0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesOriginal Researchmedia_commonPsychiatry05 social sciencesPerspective (graphical)BurdensomeneAnorèxia nerviosaAnorexia nervosamedicine.disease030227 psychiatryPsychiatry and Mental healthFeelingSocial competenceAnorexia nervosa; Burdensomeness; Fear of negative evaluation; Social; SubmissivenessPsychologySocial problemsQualitative researchClinical psychologydescription
Anorexia nervosa (AN) is a serious psychiatric disorder characterized by severe restriction of energy intake and dangerously low body weight. Other domains of functioning are affected, including social functioning. Although difficulties within this domain have started to be acknowledged by the literature, some important gaps remain to be filled. Do social difficulties predate the onset of the illness? What difficulties in particular are relevant for the development and maintenance of the illness? The aim of this study is to combine the use of quantitative and qualitative methods to answer these questions. Ninety participants with lifetime AN (88 women and 2 men) completed an online survey assessing memories of involuntary submissiveness within the family, fear of negative evaluation from others, perceived lack of social competence, feelings of social belonging, eating disorder symptoms, and work and social adjustment. Participants also answered three open questions regarding their experience of social relationships before and after the illness onset. The findings provided support for the hypothesized relationships between the study variables. Involuntary submissiveness and fear of negative evaluation predicted eating disorder symptoms and these associations were partially mediated by perceived lack of social competence. Two-thirds of the sample recalled early social difficulties before illness onset and recognized that these had played a role in the development of the illness. A larger proportion of participants stated that the eating disorder had affected their social relationships in a negative way. This study sheds some light on patients' perspective on the predisposing and maintaining role that social difficulties play in AN and identifies key psychological variables that could be targeted in treatment.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2018-02-26 | Frontiers in Psychiatry |