The continuation of non-physical abuse from childhood to adulthood in eating disorder patients: An interpretative phenomenological analysis

Theodoropoulou, Olga, Holyoak, Lynda orcid iconORCID: 0000-0002-4694-5128, Caswell, Noreen orcid iconORCID: 0000-0001-6832-6822 and Gardner, Kathryn Jane orcid iconORCID: 0000-0003-3904-1638 (2024) The continuation of non-physical abuse from childhood to adulthood in eating disorder patients: An interpretative phenomenological analysis. Child Abuse & Neglect, 149 . ISSN 0145-2134

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Official URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chiabu.2024.106661

Abstract

Background
The ED literature has focused on the physical forms of childhood abuse with respect to eating disorders, overlooking non-physical abuse even though eating disorder patients report the latter either as primary experiences or as a revival of their childhood experiences. Additionally, there is no literature exploring whether adult eating disorder patients who have experienced childhood non-physical abuse continue to experience abuse as adults, and if they do, how well-being is impacted or linked with eating pathology.

Objective
This study explored the lived experiences of eating disorders patients who have experienced non-physical childhood abuse in childhood and adulthood.

Participants and settings
Six adult female eating disorder outpatients each took part in a semi-structured interview.

Methods
This study used the Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis framework.

Results
Three master themes and eleven superordinate themes were drawn from the analysis, addressing the research question: continuation of non-physical abuse across a lifetime, developmental factors and non-physical abuse, and non-physical abuse and eating pathology.

Conclusions
The participants' accounts indicate that childhood non-physical abuse is related to eating disorder onset, and abuse continuation in adulthood contributes to the disorder's maintenance. Moreover, the lifelong consequences of non-physical childhood abuse impact psychological factors, such as self-esteem, attachment and emotion regulation, affecting the individuals' adult lives and keeping participants inside a vicious cycle of trauma re-enactment. Low self-esteem is considered by the participants as the key factor for their disturbed relationship with food.


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