Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6230564 Journal of Affective Disorders 2016 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Patients with anorexia nervosa and both of their parents were included in the study.•Patients' outcome is better when both parents are high in care giving skills.•Patients' outcome is worse when both mother and father are high in accommodation.•Mothers' skills overshadow fathers' skills in the effect on AN symptoms reduction.

BackgroundThe cognitive interpersonal model predicts that parental caregiving style will impact on the rate of improvement of anorexia nervosa symptoms. The study aims to examine whether the absolute levels and the relative congruence between mothers' and fathers' care giving styles influenced the rate of change of their children's symptoms of anorexia nervosa over 12 months.MethodsTriads (n=54) consisting of patients with anorexia nervosa and both of their parents were included in the study. Caregivers completed the Caregiver Skills scale and the Accommodation and Enabling Scale at intake. Patients completed the Short Evaluation of Eating Disorders at intake and at monthly intervals for one year. Polynomial Hierarchical Linear Modeling was used for the analysis.ResultsThere is a person/dose dependant relationship between accommodation and patients' outcome, i.e. when both mother and father are highly accommodating outcome is poor, if either is highly accommodating outcome is intermediate and if both parents are low on accommodation outcome is good. Outcome is also good if both parents or mother alone have high levels of carer skills and poor if both have low levels of skills.LimitationsIncluding only a sub-sample of an adolescent clinical population; not considering time spent care giving, and reporting patient's self-reported outcome data limits the generalisability of the current findings.ConclusionAccommodating and enabling behaviours by family members can serve to maintain eating disorder behaviours. However, skilful behaviours particularly by mothers, can aid recovery. Clinical interventions to optimise care giving skills and to reduce accommodation by both parents may be an important addition to treatment for anorexia nervosa.

Keywords
Related Topics
Health Sciences Medicine and Dentistry Psychiatry and Mental Health
Authors
, , , , , , , , , , ,