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Comer, Abnormal Psychology, 8th edition

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Eating Disorders Chapter 11 Comer, Abnormal Psychology, 8e Slides & Handouts by Karen Clay Rhines, Ph.D. Northampton Community College Treatments for Bulimia Nervosa ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Comer, Abnormal Psychology, 8th edition


1
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2
Eating Disorders
  • It has not always done so, but Western society
    today equates thinness with health and beauty
  • Thinness has become a national obsession
  • There has been a rise in eating disorders in the
    past three decades
  • The core issue is a morbid fear of weight gain
  • Two main diagnoses

3
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
  • Distorted view of weight and shape
  • Amenorrhea

4
Anorexia Nervosa
  • There are two main subtypes
  • Restricting type
  • Lose weight by cutting out sweets and fattening
    snacks, eventually eliminating nearly all food
  • Show almost no variability in diet
  • Binge-eating/purging type
  • Lose weight by forcing themselves to vomit after
    meals or by abusing laxatives or diuretics
  • Like those with bulimia nervosa, people with this
    subtype may engage in eating binges

5
Anorexia Nervosa
  • The typical case
  • A normal to slightly overweight female has been
    on a diet
  • Escalation toward anorexia nervosa may follow a
    stressful event
  • Separation of parents
  • Move away from home
  • 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

6
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 size and shape

7
Anorexia Nervosa The Clinical Picture
  • Despite their dietary restrictions, people with
    anorexia nervosa are 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

8
Anorexia Nervosa The Clinical Picture
  • Persons with anorexia nervosa also think in
    distorted ways
  • Usually 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

9
Anorexia Nervosa The Clinical Picture
  • People with anorexia nervosa also display certain
    psychological problems

10
Anorexia Nervosa Medical Problems
  • Caused by starvation

11
Bulimia Nervosa
  • Bulimia nervosa, also known as binge-purge
    syndrome, is characterized by binges
  • Bouts of uncontrolled overeating during a limited
    period of time
  • Eat objectively more than most people would/could
    eat in a similar period

12
Bulimia Nervosa
  • The typical case
  • A normal to slightly overweight female has been
    on an intense diet
  • Research suggests that even among normal
    participants, bingeing often occurs after strict
    dieting
  • Like anorexia nervosa, about 9095 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

13
Bulimia Nervosa
  • The disorder is also characterized by
    inappropriate compensatory behaviors, which mark
    the subtype of the condition
  • Purging-type bulimia nervosa
  • Forced vomiting
  • Misusing laxatives, diuretics, or enemas
  • Nonpurging-type bulimia nervosa
  • Fasting
  • Exercising frantically

14
Bulimia Nervosa
  • Patients are generally of normal weight
  • Often experience marked weight fluctuations
  • Some may also qualify for a diagnosis of anorexia
  • Binge-eating disorder is a related diagnosis
  • Symptoms include a pattern of binge eating with
    NO compensatory behaviors (such as vomiting)

15
Bulimia Nervosa Binges
  • People with bulimia nervosa may have between 1
    and 30 binge episodes per week
  • Binges are often carried out in secret
  • Binges involve eating massive amounts of food
    very rapidly with little chewing
  • Usually sweet, high-calorie foods with soft
    texture
  • Binge-eaters commonly consume between 1,000 and
    10,000 calories per binge episode

16
Overlapping Patterns Of Anorexia Nervosa, Bulimia
Nervosa, And Obesity
17
Bulimia Nervosa Binges
  • Binges are usually preceded by feelings of great
    tension and/or powerlessness
  • Although the binge itself may be pleasurable, it
    is usually followed by feelings of extreme
    self-blame, guilt, depression, and fears of
    weight gain and being discovered

18
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
  • Repeated vomiting affects the ability to feel
    satiated ? greater hunger and bingeing
  • Laxatives and diuretics
  • Also largely fails to reduce the number of
    calories consumed

19
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

20
Bulimia Nervosa vs. Anorexia Nervosa
21
Bulimia Nervosa vs. Anorexia Nervosa
22
Bulimia Nervosa vs. Anorexia Nervosa
23
Binge Eating Disorder
  • Repeated eating binges during which they feel no
    control over their eating
  • These individuals do not perform inappropriate
    compensatory behavior
  • As a result of their frequent binges, around
    two-thirds of people with binge eating disorder
    become overweight or even obese

24
What Causes Eating Disorders?
  • Most theorists and researchers use a
    multidimensional risk perspective to explain
    eating disorders
  • Several key factors place individuals at risk
  • More factors greater likelihood of developing a
    disorder
  • Leading factors
  • Psychological problems (ego, cognitive, and mood
    disturbances)
  • Biological factors
  • Sociocultural conditions (societal, family, and
    multicultural pressures)

25
Psychodynamic Factors Ego Deficiencies
  • Hilde Bruch developed a largely psychodynamic
    theory of eating disorders
  • Argued that eating disorders are the result of
    disturbed motherchild interactions, which lead
    to serious ego deficiencies in the child and to
    severe perceptual disturbances

26
Psychodynamic Factors Ego Deficiencies
  • 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
    needs they feed when the child is anxious,
    comfort when the child is tired, etc.
  • Such children may grow up confused and unaware of
    their own internal needs and turn, instead, to
    external guides
  • Clinical reports and research have provided some
    empirical support for this theory

27
Cognitive Factors
  • Bruch's theory also contains several cognitive
    factors, like improper labeling of internal
    sensations and needs
  • According to cognitive theorists, these
    deficiencies contribute to a broad cognitive
    distortion that lies at the center of disordered
    eating (e.g., negative self-judgment based on
    body shape and weight)

28
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

29
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 serotonin
    abnormalities
  • Symptoms of eating disorders are helped by
    antidepressant medications

30
Biological Factors
  • Biological theorists suspect certain genes may
    leave some people particularly susceptible to
    eating disorders
  • Consistent with this idea
  • Relatives of people with eating disorders are up
    to 6 times more likely to develop the disorder
    themselves
  • Identical (MZ) twins with anorexia 70
  • Fraternal (DZ) twins with anorexia 20
  • Identical (MZ) twins with bulimia 23
  • Fraternal (DZ) twins with bulimia 9
  • These findings may be related to low serotonin

31
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)

32
Biological Factors
  • Some theorists believe that the hypothalamus,
    related brain areas, and chemicals together 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, ?
    metabolic rate ? binges
  • If weight rises above set point ? hunger, ?
    metabolic rate
  • Dieters end up in a battle against themselves to
    lose weight

33
Societal Pressures
  • Many theorists believe that current Western
    standards of female attractiveness are partly
    responsible for the emergence of eating disorders
  • Western 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

34
Societal Pressures
  • Members of certain subcultures 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 appear to have an eating
    disorder

35
Societal Pressures
  • Societal attitudes may explain economic and
    racial differences seen in prevalence rates
  • Historically, women of higher SES expressed more
    concern about thinness and dieting
  • These women had higher rates of eating disorders
    than women of the lower socioeconomic classes
  • Recently, dieting and preoccupation with
    thinness, along with rates of eating disorders,
    are increasing in all groups

36
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
  • A recent survey of adolescent girls tied eating
    disorders and body dissatisfaction to social
    networking, Internet activities, and television
    browsing

37
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

38
Family Environment
  • Abnormal interactions and forms of communication
    within a family may also set the stage for an
    eating disorder
  • Influential family theorist Salvador Minuchin
    cites enmeshed family patterns as causal
    factors of eating disorders
  • These patterns include overinvolvement in, and
    overconcern about, family member's lives

39
Multicultural Factors Racial and Ethnic
Differences
  • A widely publicized 1995 study found that eating
    behaviors and attitudes of young African American
    women were more positive than those of young
    white American women
  • Specifically, nearly 90 of the white American
    respondents were dissatisfied with their weight
    and body shape, compared to around 70 of the
    African American teens
  • The study also suggested that the groups had
    different ideals of beauty

40
Multicultural Factors Racial and Ethnic
Differences
  • Eating disorders among Hispanic American female
    adolescents are about equal to those of white
    American women
  • Eating disorders also appear to be on the
    increase among Asian American women and young
    women in several Asian countries

41
Multicultural Factors Racial and Ethnic
Differences
  • Males account for only 5 to 10 of all cases of
    eating disorders
  • The reasons for this striking difference are not
    entirely clear, but Western society's double
    standard for attractiveness is, at the very
    least, one reason
  • A second reason may be the different methods of
    weight loss favored
  • Men are more likely to exercise
  • Women more often diet

42
Multicultural Factors Racial and Ethnic
Differences
  • It seems that some men develop eating disorders
    as linked to the requirements and pressures of a
    job or sport
  • The highest rates of male eating disorders have
    been found among
  • Jockeys
  • Wrestlers
  • Distance runners
  • Body builders
  • Swimmers

43
Multicultural Factors Racial and Ethnic
Differences
  • For other men, body image appears to be a key
    factor
  • Last, some men seem to be caught up in a new kind
    of eating disorder reverse anorexia nervosa or
    muscle dysmorphobia

44
How Are Eating Disorders Treated?
  • Eating disorder treatments have two main goals
  • Correct dangerous 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

45
Treatments for Anorexia Nervosa
  • The immediate aims of treatment for anorexia
    nervosa are to
  • Regain lost weight
  • Recover from malnourishment
  • Eat normally again

46
Treatments for Anorexia Nervosa
  • In the past, treatment took place in a hospital
    setting it is now often offered in day hospitals
    or outpatient settings
  • 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
  • In contrast, behavioral weight-restoration
    approaches have clinicians use rewards whenever
    patients eat properly or gain weight

47
Treatments for Anorexia Nervosa
  • The most popular weight-restoration technique has
    been the combination of supportive nursing care,
    nutritional counseling, and high-calorie diets
  • Necessary weight gain is often achieved in 8 to
    12 weeks
  • Researchers have found that people with anorexia
    nervosa must overcome their underlying
    psychological problems to achieve lasting
    improvement

48
Treatments for Anorexia Nervosa
  • In most treatment programs, a combination of
    behavioral and cognitive interventions are
    included
  • On the behavioral side, clients are required to
    monitor feelings, hunger levels, and food intake
    and the ties among those variables
  • On the cognitive sides, they are taught to
    identify their core pathology

49
Treatments for Anorexia Nervosa
  • Therapists help patients recognize their need for
    independence and control
  • Therapists help patients recognize and trust
    their internal feelings
  • A final focus of treatment is helping clients
    change their attitudes about eating and weight
  • Using cognitive approaches, therapists correct
    disturbed cognitions and educate about body
    distortions
  • Family therapy is important for anorexia nervosa
    treatment
  • The main issues are often separation and
    boundaries

50
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

51
Treatments for Anorexia Nervosa
52
Treatments for Bulimia Nervosa
  • Treatment is frequently offered in eating
    disorder clinics
  • The immediate 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

53
Treatments for Bulimia Nervosa
  • Cognitive-behavioral therapy is particularly
    helpful
  • Behavioral techniques
  • Diaries are often a useful component of treatment
  • Exposure and response prevention (ERP) is used to
    break the binge-purge cycle
  • Cognitive techniques
  • Help clients recognize and change their
    maladaptive attitudes toward food, eating,
    weight, and shape
  • Typically teach individuals to identify and
    challenge the negative thoughts that precede the
    urge to binge

54
Treatments for Bulimia Nervosa
  • Other forms of psychotherapy
  • If clients do not respond to cognitive-behavioral
    therapy, other approaches may be tried
  • A common alternative is interpersonal therapy
    (IPT) a treatment that seeks to improve
    interpersonal functioning may be tried
  • Psychodynamic therapy has also been used

55
Treatments for Bulimia Nervosa
  • Other forms of psychotherapy
  • Various forms of psychotherapy are often
    supplemented by family therapy and may be offered
    in either individual or group therapy format
  • Group formats provide an opportunity for patients
    to express their thoughts, concerns, and
    experiences with one another
  • Group therapy is helpful in as many as 75 of
    cases

56
Treatments for Bulimia Nervosa
  • Antidepressant medications
  • During the past 15 years, all groups of
    antidepressant drugs have been used in bulimia
    nervosa treatment
  • Drugs help as many as 40 of patients
  • Medications are best when used in combination
    with other forms of therapy

57
Treatments for Bulimia Nervosa
  • Left untreated, bulimia nervosa can last for
    years
  • Treatment provides immediate, significant
    improvement in about 40 of cases
  • An additional 40 show moderate response
  • Follow-up studies suggest that 10 years after
    treatment about 75 of patients have fully or
    partially recovered

58
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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