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A new social-family model for eating disorders: A European multicentre project using a case-control design

journal contribution
posted on 2015-08-18, 00:00 authored by I Krug, Matthew Fuller-TyszkiewiczMatthew Fuller-Tyszkiewicz, M Anderluh, L Bellodi, S Bagnoli, D Collier, F Fernandez-Aranda, A Karwautz, S Mitchell, B Nacmias, V Ricca, S Sorbi, K Tchanuria, G Wagner, J Treasure, N Micali
OBJECTIVE: To examine a new socio-family risk model of Eating Disorders (EDs) using path-analyses. METHOD: The sample comprised 1264 (ED patients = 653; Healthy Controls = 611) participants, recruited into a multicentre European project. Socio-family factors assessed included: perceived maternal and parental parenting styles, family, peer and media influences, and body dissatisfaction. Two types of path-analyses were run to assess the socio-family model: 1.) a multinomial logistic path-model including ED sub-types [Anorexia Nervosa-Restrictive (AN-R), AN-Binge-Purging (AN-BP), Bulimia Nervosa (BN) and EDNOS)] as the key polychotomous categorical outcome and 2.) a path-model assessing whether the socio-family model differed across ED sub-types and healthy controls using body dissatisfaction as the outcome variable. RESULTS: The first path-analyses suggested that family and media (but not peers) were directly and indirectly associated (through body dissatisfaction) with all ED sub-types. There was a weak effect of perceived parenting directly on ED sub-types and indirectly through family influences and body dissatisfaction. For the second path-analyses, the socio-family model varied substantially across ED sub-types. Family and media influences were related to body dissatisfaction in the EDNOS and control sample, whereas perceived abusive parenting was related to AN-BP and BN. DISCUSSION: This is the first study providing support for this new socio-family model, which differed across ED sub-types. This suggests that prevention and early intervention might need to be tailored to diagnosis-specific ED profiles.

History

Journal

Appetite

Volume

95

Pagination

544 - 553

Publisher

Elsevier

Location

Amsterdam, The Netherlands

eISSN

1095-8304

Language

eng

Publication classification

C Journal article; C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2015, Elsevier