AP6_Lecture_Ch11
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Transcript AP6_Lecture_Ch11
Slides & Handouts by Karen Clay Rhines, Ph.D.
Seton Hall University
Chapter 11
Eating Disorders
Comer, Abnormal Psychology, 6e – Chapter 11
1
Eating Disorders
Although not historically true, current Western beauty
standards equate thinness with health and beauty
There has been a rise in eating disorders in the past
three decades
Thinness has become a national obsession!
The core issue is a morbid fear of weight gain
Two main diagnoses:
Anorexia nervosa
Bulimia nervosa
Comer, Abnormal Psychology, 6e – Chapter 11
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Anorexia Nervosa
The main symptoms of anorexia nervosa are:
A refusal to maintain more than 85% of normal
body weight
Intense fears of becoming overweight
A distorted view of body weight and shape
Amenorrhea
Comer, Abnormal Psychology, 6e – Chapter 11
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Anorexia Nervosa
There are two main subtypes:
Restricting type
Lose weight by restricting “bad” foods, eventually restricting nearly all
food
Show almost no variability in diet
Binge-eating/purging type
Lose weight by vomiting after meals, abusing laxatives or diuretics, or
engaging in excessive exercise
Like those with bulimia nervosa, people with this subtype may engage
in eating binges
Comer, Abnormal Psychology, 6e – Chapter 11
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Anorexia Nervosa
About 90%–95% of cases occur in females
The peak age of onset is between 14 and 18
years
Between 0.5% and 2% of females in Western
countries develop the disorder
Many more display some symptoms
Rates of anorexia nervosa are increasing in
North America, Japan, and Europe
Comer, Abnormal Psychology, 6e – Chapter 11
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Anorexia Nervosa
The “typical” case:
A normal to slightly overweight female has been on a diet
Escalation to anorexia nervosa may follow a stressful event
Separation of parents
Move or life transition
Experience of personal failure
Most patients recover
However, about 2% to 6% become seriously ill and die as a result of
medical complications or suicide
Comer, Abnormal Psychology, 6e – Chapter 11
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Anorexia Nervosa: The Clinical
Picture
The key goal for people with anorexia nervosa is
becoming thin
The driving motivation is fear:
Of becoming obese
Of giving in to the desire to eat
Of losing control of body shape and weight
Comer, Abnormal Psychology, 6e – Chapter 11
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Anorexia Nervosa: The Clinical
Picture
Despite their dietary restrictions, people with
anorexia are extremely preoccupied with food
This includes thinking and reading about food and
planning for meals
This relationship is not necessarily causal
It may be the result of food deprivation, as evidenced by
the famous 1940s “starvation study” with conscientious
objectors
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Anorexia Nervosa: The Clinical
Picture
People with anorexia nervosa also think in distorted
ways:
Often have a low opinion of their body shape
Tend to overestimate their actual proportions
Adjustable lens assessment technique
Hold maladaptive attitudes and misperceptions
“I must be perfect in every way”
“I will be a better person if I deprive myself ”
“I can avoid guilt by not eating”
Comer, Abnormal Psychology, 6e – Chapter 11
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Anorexia Nervosa: The Clinical
Picture
People with anorexia may also display certain
psychological problems:
Depression (usually mild)
Anxiety
Low self-esteem
Insomnia or other sleep disturbances
Substance abuse
Obsessive-compulsive patterns
Perfectionism
Comer, Abnormal Psychology, 6e – Chapter 11
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Anorexia Nervosa: Medical Problems
Caused by starvation:
Amenorrhea
Slow heart rate
Low body temperature
Low blood pressure
Metabolic and electrolyte
imbalances
Dry skin, brittle nails
Poor circulation
Lanugo
Body swelling
Reduced bone density
Comer, Abnormal Psychology, 6e – Chapter 11
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The Vicious Cycle of Anorexia
Fear of obesity and distorted body image lead to…
Starvation
Preoccupation with food
Harder attempts at thinness
Increased anxiety & depression
Greater feelings of fear & loss of control
Medical problems
Comer, Abnormal Psychology, 6e – Chapter 11
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Bulimia Nervosa
Bulimia nervosa, also known as “binge-purge
syndrome,” is characterized by binges:
Bouts of uncontrolled overeating during a limited
period of time
Eats objectively more than most people would/could eat
in a similar period
Comer, Abnormal Psychology, 6e – Chapter 11
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Bulimia Nervosa
The disorder is also characterized by compensatory
behaviors, which mark the subtype of the disorder:
Purging-type bulimia nervosa
Vomiting
Misusing laxatives, diuretics, or enemas
Nonpurging-type bulimia nervosa
Fasting
Exercising excessively
Comer, Abnormal Psychology, 6e – Chapter 11
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Bulimia Nervosa
Like anorexia nervosa, about 90%–95% of
bulimia nervosa cases occur in females
The peak age of onset is between 15 and 21
years
Symptoms may last for several years with
periodic letup
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Bulimia Nervosa
Patients are generally of normal weight
Often experience weight fluctuations
Some may also qualify for a diagnosis of anorexia
“Binge-eating disorder” may be a related
diagnosis
Symptoms include a pattern of binge eating with
NO compensatory behaviors (such as vomiting)
This condition is not yet listed in the DSM-IV-TR
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Bulimia Nervosa
Teens and young adults have frequently
attempted binge-purge patterns as a means of
weight loss, often after hearing accounts of
bulimia from friends or the media
In one study:
50% of college students reported periodic binges
6% tried vomiting
8% experimented with laxatives at least once
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Bulimia Nervosa:
Binges
For people with bulimia nervosa, the number of binges
per week can range from 2 to 40
Average: 10 per week
Binges are often carried out in secret
Binges involve eating massive amounts of food rapidly with
little chewing
Usually sweet foods with soft texture
Binge-eaters commonly consume more than 1000 calories
(often more than 3000 calories) per binge episode
Comer, Abnormal Psychology, 6e – Chapter 11
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Bulimia Nervosa:
Binges
Binges are usually preceded by feelings of
tension and/or powerlessness
Although the binge itself may be pleasurable, it
is usually followed by feelings of extreme selfblame, guilt, depression, and fears of weight
gain and “discovery”
Comer, Abnormal Psychology, 6e – Chapter 11
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Bulimia Nervosa:
Compensatory Behaviors
After a binge, people with bulimia nervosa try to
compensate for and “undo” the caloric effects
The most common compensatory behaviors:
Vomiting
Fails to prevent the absorption of half the calories consumed during
a binge
Affects ability to feel satiated greater hunger and bingeing
Laxatives and diuretics
Also almost completely fail to reduce the number of calories
consumed
Comer, Abnormal Psychology, 6e – Chapter 11
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Bulimia Nervosa:
Compensatory Behaviors
Compensatory behaviors may temporarily
relieve the negative feelings attached to binge
eating
Over time, however, a cycle develops in which
purging bingeing purging…
Comer, Abnormal Psychology, 6e – Chapter 11
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Bulimia Nervosa
The “typical” case:
A normal to slightly overweight female has been on
an intense diet
Research suggests that even among normal subjects,
bingeing often occurs after strict dieting
For example, a study of binge-eating behavior in a lowcalorie weight loss program found that 62% of patients
reported binge-eating episodes during treatment
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Bulimia Nervosa vs.
Anorexia Nervosa
Similarities:
Onset after a period of dieting
Fear of becoming obese
Drive to become thin
Preoccupation with food, weight, appearance
Elevated risk of self-harm or attempts at suicide
Feelings of anxiety, depression, perfectionism
Substance abuse
Disturbed attitudes toward eating
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Bulimia Nervosa vs.
Anorexia Nervosa
Differences:
People with bulimia are more worried about pleasing others,
being attractive to others, and having intimate relationships
People with bulimia tend to be more sexually experienced
People with bulimia display fewer of the obsessive qualities
that drive restricting-type anorexia
People with bulimia are more likely to have histories of mood
swings, low frustration tolerance, and poor coping
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Bulimia Nervosa vs.
Anorexia Nervosa
Differences:
People with bulimia tend to be controlled by emotion – may
change friendships easily
People with bulimia are more likely to display characteristics
of a personality disorder
Different medical complications:
Only half of women with bulimia experience amenorrhea vs. almost
all women with anorexia
People with bulimia suffer damage caused by purging, especially from
vomiting and laxatives
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What Causes Eating Disorders?
Most theorists subscribe to a multidimensional risk
perspective:
Several key factors place individuals at risk
More factors = greater risk
Leading factors:
Sociocultural conditions (societal and family pressures)
Psychological problems (ego, cognitive, and mood disturbances)
Biological factors
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What Causes Eating Disorders?
Societal Pressures
Many theorists believe that current Western
standards of female attractiveness have
contributed to the rise of eating disorders
Standards have changed throughout history toward a
thinner ideal
Miss America contestants have declined in weight by 0.28
lbs/yr; winners have declined by 0.37 lbs/yr
Playboy centerfolds have lower average weight, bust, and
hip measurements than in the past
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What Causes Eating Disorders?
Societal Pressures
Certain groups are at greater risk from these
pressures:
Models, actors, dancers, and certain athletes
Of college athletes surveyed, 9% met full criteria for an
eating disorder while another 50% had symptoms
20% of surveyed gymnasts met full criteria for an eating
disorder
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What Causes Eating Disorders?
Societal Pressures
Societal attitudes may explain economic and racial
differences seen in prevalence rates
In the past, Caucasian women of higher SES expressed more
concern about thinness and dieting
These women had higher rates of eating disorders than African
American women or Caucasian women of lower SES
Recently, dieting and preoccupation with food, along with
rates of eating disorders, are increasing in all groups
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What Causes Eating Disorders?
Societal Pressures
The socially accepted prejudice against
overweight people may also add to the “fear”
and preoccupation about weight
About 50% of elementary and 61% of middle
school girls are currently dieting
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What Causes Eating Disorders?
Family Environment
Families may play an important role in the
development of eating disorders
As many as half of the families of those with eating
disorders have a long history of emphasizing
thinness, appearance, and dieting
Mothers of those with eating disorders are more
likely to be dieters and perfectionistic themselves
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What Causes Eating Disorders?
Family Environment
Abnormal family interactions and forms of
communication within a family may also set the stage
for an eating disorder
Minuchin cites “enmeshed family patterns” as causal factors
of eating disorders
These patterns include overinvolvement in, and overconcern about,
family member’s lives
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What Causes Eating Disorders?
Ego Deficiencies and Cognitive Disturbances
Bruch argues that eating disorders are the result
of disturbed mother–child interactions which
lead to serious ego deficiencies in the child and
to severe cognitive disturbances
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What Causes Eating Disorders?
Ego Deficiencies and Cognitive Disturbances
Bruch argues that parents may respond to their children
either effectively or ineffectively
Effective parents accurately attend to a child’s biological and
emotional needs
Ineffective parents fail to attend to child’s internal needs; they
feed when the child is anxious, comfort when the child is
tired, etc.
There is some empirical support for Bruch’s theory
from clinical reports
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What Causes Eating Disorders?
Mood Disorders
Many people with eating disorders, particularly
those with bulimia nervosa, experience
symptoms of depression
Theorists believe mood disorders may “set the
stage” for eating disorders
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What Causes Eating Disorders?
Mood Disorders
There is empirical support for the claim that mood
disorders set the stage for eating disorders:
Many more people with an eating disorder qualify for a
clinical diagnosis of major depressive disorder than do people
in the general population
Close relatives of those with eating disorders seem to have
higher rates of mood disorders
People with eating disorders, especially those with bulimia
nervosa, have low levels of serotonin
Symptoms of eating disorders are helped by antidepressant
medications
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What Causes Eating Disorders?
Biological Factors
Biological theorists suspect certain genes may
leave some people particularly susceptible to
eating disorders
Consistent with this model:
Relatives of people with eating disorders are 6 times more
likely to develop the disorder themselves
Identical (MZ) twins with bulimia: 23%
Fraternal (DZ) twins with bulimia: 9%
These findings may be related to low serotonin
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What Causes Eating Disorders?
Biological Factors
Other theorists believe that eating disorders may
be related to dysfunction of the hypothalamus
Researchers have identified two separate areas that
control eating:
Lateral hypothalamus (LH)
Ventromedial hypothalamus (VMH)
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What Causes Eating Disorders?
Biological Factors
Some theorists believe that the LH and VMH are
responsible for weight set point – a “weight
thermostat” of sorts
Set by genetic inheritance and early eating practices, this
mechanism is responsible for keeping an individual at a
particular weight level
If weight falls below set point: hunger, metabolism binges
If weight rises above set point: hunger, metabolism
Dieters end up in a fight against themselves to lose weight
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Treatments for Eating Disorders
Eating disorder treatments have two main goals:
Correct abnormal eating patterns
Address broader psychological and situational
factors that have led to and are maintaining the
eating problem
This often requires the participation of family and friends
Comer, Abnormal Psychology, 6e – Chapter 11
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Treatments for Anorexia Nervosa
The initial aims of treatment for anorexia
nervosa are to:
Restore proper weight
Recover from malnourishment
Restore proper eating
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Treatments for Anorexia Nervosa
In the past, treatment took place in a hospital setting; it
is now often offered in an outpatient setting
In life-threatening cases, clinicians may need to force
tube and intravenous feedings on the patient
This may breed distrust in the patient and create a power
struggle
Most common technique now is the use of supportive
nursing care and high-calorie diets
Necessary weight gain is often achieved in 8 to 12 weeks
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Treatments for Anorexia Nervosa
Researchers have found that people with
anorexia must overcome their underlying
psychological problems in order to achieve
lasting improvement
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Treatments for Anorexia Nervosa
Therapists use a mixture of therapy and education to
achieve this broader goal, using a combination of
individual, group, and family approaches
One focus of treatment is building autonomy and selfawareness
Therapists help patients recognize their need for
independence and control
Therapists help patients recognize and trust their internal
feelings
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Treatments for Anorexia Nervosa
Another focus of treatment is correcting
disturbed cognitions, especially client
misperceptions and attitudes about eating and
weight
Using cognitive approaches, therapists correct
disturbed cognitions and educate about body
distortions
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Treatments for Anorexia Nervosa
Another focus of treatment is changing family
interactions
Family therapy is important for anorexia
The main issues are often separation and boundaries
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Treatments for Anorexia Nervosa
The use of combined treatment approaches has
greatly improved the outlook for people with
anorexia nervosa
But even with combined treatment, recovery is
difficult
The course and outcome of the disorder vary
from person to person
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Treatments for Anorexia Nervosa
Positives of treatment:
Weight gain is often quickly restored
83%
of patients still showed improvements after
several years
Menstruation often returns with return to normal
weight
The death rate from anorexia is declining
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Treatments for Anorexia Nervosa
Negatives of treatment:
Close to 20% of patients remain troubled for years
Even when it occurs, recovery is not always
permanent
Anorexic behaviors recur in at least one-third of
recovered patients, usually triggered by stress
Many patients still express concerns about body shape
and weight
Lingering emotional problems are common
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Treatments for Bulimia Nervosa
Treatment programs are relatively new but have
risen in popularity
Treatment is frequently offered in specialized
eating disorder clinics
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Treatments for Bulimia Nervosa
The initial aims of treatment for bulimia
nervosa are to:
Eliminate binge-purge patterns
Establish good eating habits
Eliminate the underlying cause of bulimic patterns
Programs emphasize education as much as
therapy
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Treatments for Bulimia Nervosa
Several treatment strategies:
Individual insight therapy
The insight approach receiving the most attention is
cognitive therapy, which helps clients recognize and
change their maladaptive attitudes toward food, eating,
weight, and shape
As many as 65% stop their binge-purge cycle
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Treatments for Bulimia Nervosa
Several treatment strategies:
Individual insight therapy
If cognitive therapy isn’t effective, interpersonal therapy
(IPT), a treatment that seeks to improve interpersonal
functioning, may be tried
A number of clinicians also suggest self-help groups or
self-care manuals
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Treatments for Bulimia Nervosa
Several treatment strategies:
Behavioral therapy
Behavioral techniques are often included in treatment as a
supplement to cognitive therapy
Diaries are often a useful component of treatment
Exposure and response prevention (ERP) is used to break
the binge-purge cycle
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Treatments for Bulimia Nervosa
Several treatment strategies:
Antidepressant medications
During the past decade, antidepressant drugs have been
used in bulimia treatment
Most common is fluoxetine (Prozac), an SSRI
Drugs help as many as 40% of patients
Medications are best when used in combination with
other forms of therapy
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Treatments for Bulimia Nervosa
Several treatment strategies:
Group therapy
Provides an opportunity for patients to express their
thoughts, concerns, and experiences with one another
Helpful in as many as 75% of cases, especially when
combined with individual insight therapy
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Treatments for Bulimia Nervosa
Left untreated, bulimia can last for years
Treatment provides immediate, significant
improvement in about 40% of cases
An additional 40% show moderate improvement
Follow-up studies suggest that 10 years after
treatment about 90% of patients have fully or
partially recovered
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Treatments for Bulimia Nervosa
Relapse can be a significant problem, even among those
who respond successfully to treatment
Relapses are usually triggered by stress
Relapses are more likely among persons who:
Had a longer history of symptoms
Vomited frequently
Had histories of substance use
Have lingering interpersonal problems
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Treatments for Bulimia Nervosa
Finally, treatment may also help improve overall
psychological and social functioning
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