"It's like building a new person": lived experience perspectives on eating disorder recovery processes.

IF 3.5 3区 医学 Q2 NUTRITION & DIETETICS Journal of Eating Disorders Pub Date : 2024-07-08 DOI:10.1186/s40337-024-01045-5
Andrea LaMarre, Megan Hellner, Scout Silverstein, Jessica H Baker, Bek Urban, Jacqlyn Yourell, Hannah Wolfe, Taylor Perry, Dori Steinberg
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Abstract

Background: Deeply engaging with the expertise of those who have experienced or supported someone with an eating disorder can add to a growing body of knowledge about recovery processes. In this qualitative study, we sought to explore and generate nuanced understandings of recovery experiences of people with a lived ED experience (first hand or as a caregiver) who were working as mentors in the field. To do this, we focused on changes that occur in personality, traits, and interests over the course of an eating disorder and into recovery.

Method: We conducted semi-structured interviews with 27 people with an eating disorder history, either through personal lived experience (n = 14) or as a caregiver of a loved one with an eating disorder (n = 13). We undertook a reflexive thematic analysis of the data through a critical realist lens.

Results: We developed three themes, which illustrate the nonlinearity, relationality, and systemically linked nature of changes across experiences of having and recovering from an eating disorder. The first theme focuses on expansion; participants described how their worlds got bigger as they explored who they were becoming and discovered new ways of living in line with their values. The second theme emphasizes the balance between support and autonomy participants described as important for enabling change to occur across the recovery process. The last theme highlights the ways in which changes throughout the recovery process entwined with systemic factors, including actively pushing back against diet culture and weight stigma.

Conclusions: Participants' stories highlight interactions between individual, relational, and societal shifts that occur throughout the course of an ED and into recovery. They support ongoing calls to orient to ED recovery as situated within a broader social milieu, which invites us to build supportive environments to enable expansion and flourishing.

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"就像重新塑造一个人":从生活经验的角度看饮食失调症的康复过程。
背景:深入了解那些曾经经历过或支持过饮食失调症患者的人的专业知识,可以为不断增长的有关康复过程的知识体系添砖加瓦。在这项定性研究中,我们试图探索并深入理解那些曾有过饮食失调经历的人(亲身经历或作为照顾者)的康复经验,他们在该领域中担任导师。为此,我们重点研究了在饮食失调和康复过程中性格、特质和兴趣方面发生的变化:我们对 27 名有饮食失调病史的人进行了半结构化访谈,这些人或有个人生活经历(14 人),或作为饮食失调患者的照顾者(13 人)。我们通过批判现实主义视角对数据进行了反思性主题分析:我们提出了三个主题,它们说明了饮食失调症患者和康复者经历的非线性、关联性和变化的系统关联性。第一个主题的重点是扩展;参与者描述了他们的世界是如何变得更大的,因为他们探索了自己正在成为什么样的人,并发现了符合自己价值观的新的生活方式。第二个主题强调支持与自主之间的平衡,参与者认为这对于在整个康复过程中实现改变非常重要。最后一个主题强调了整个康复过程中的变化是如何与系统性因素交织在一起的,包括积极抵制节食文化和体重污名化:参与者的故事强调了在整个 ED 和康复过程中发生的个人、关系和社会转变之间的相互作用。他们的故事支持了将 ED 恢复作为更广泛的社会环境的导向的持续呼吁,这就要求我们建立支持性环境,以实现扩展和繁荣。
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来源期刊
Journal of Eating Disorders
Journal of Eating Disorders Neuroscience-Behavioral Neuroscience
CiteScore
5.30
自引率
17.10%
发文量
161
审稿时长
16 weeks
期刊介绍: Journal of Eating Disorders is the first open access, peer-reviewed journal publishing leading research in the science and clinical practice of eating disorders. It disseminates research that provides answers to the important issues and key challenges in the field of eating disorders and to facilitate translation of evidence into practice. The journal publishes research on all aspects of eating disorders namely their epidemiology, nature, determinants, neurobiology, prevention, treatment and outcomes. The scope includes, but is not limited to anorexia nervosa, bulimia nervosa, binge eating disorder and other eating disorders. Related areas such as important co-morbidities, obesity, body image, appetite, food and eating are also included. Articles about research methodology and assessment are welcomed where they advance the field of eating disorders.
期刊最新文献
From fixing to connecting: parents' experiences supporting adult children with eating disorders. Growing up in a larger body: youth- and parent-reported triggers for illness and barriers to recovery from anorexia nervosa. Correction: The role of impulsivity and binge eating in outpatients with overweight or obesity: an EEG temporal discounting study. Muscularity-oriented disordered eating: investigating body image concerns and the moderating role of emotion dysregulation in cyclists. Neurodivergence, intersectionality, and eating disorders: a lived experience-led narrative review.
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