Literature DB >> 26150064

'Healthy anorexia': The complexity of care in disordered eating.

Connie Musolino1, Megan Warin2, Tracey Wade3, Peter Gilchrist4.   

Abstract

This paper examines how contemporary understandings of 'health' and 'care' are engaged with and practiced by women with disordered eating. Based on findings from an Australian study investigating why people with disordered eating are reluctant to engage with treatment services (March 2012 to March 2015), we demonstrate how young women use elements of a 'health habitus' and 'care' to rationalise and justify their practices. Moving beyond Foucauldian theories of self-discipline and individual responsibility we argue that Bourdieu's concept of habitus and ethnographic concepts of care provide a deeper understanding of the ways in which people with disordered eating embody health practices as a form of care and distinction. We demonstrate how eating and bodily practices that entail 'natural', medical and ethical concerns (in particular, the new food regime known as orthorexia) are successfully incorporated into participants' eating disorder repertoires and embodied as a logic of care. Understanding how categories of health and care are tinkered with and practiced by people with disordered eating has important implications for health professionals, family members and peers engaging with and identifying people at all stages of help-seeking.
Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Australia; Care; Disordered eating; Distinction; Healthism habitus; Healthy anorexia; Orthorexia; Symbolic capital

Mesh:

Year:  2015        PMID: 26150064     DOI: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2015.06.030

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Soc Sci Med        ISSN: 0277-9536            Impact factor:   4.634


  23 in total

1.  #Orthorexia on Instagram: a descriptive study exploring the online conversation and community using the Netlytic software.

Authors:  Sara Santarossa; Jillian Lacasse; Jordan Larocque; Sarah J Woodruff
Journal:  Eat Weight Disord       Date:  2018-10-13       Impact factor: 4.652

2.  Pathways to orthorexia nervosa: a case series discussion.

Authors:  Marianna Rania; Renato de Filippis; Cristina Segura-Garcia; Mariarita Caroleo; Elvira Carbone; Matteo Aloi; Steven Bratman
Journal:  Eat Weight Disord       Date:  2020-07-14       Impact factor: 4.652

3.  Distinct and Untamed: Articulating Bulimic Identities.

Authors:  Karin Eli
Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry       Date:  2018-03

4.  Attitudes towards disordered eating in the rock climbing community: a digital ethnography.

Authors:  Mattias Strand
Journal:  J Eat Disord       Date:  2022-07-07

5.  An unhealthy health behavior: analysis of orthorexic tendencies among Hungarian gym attendees.

Authors:  Enikő Bóna; Zsuzsanna Szél; Dániel Kiss; V Anna Gyarmathy
Journal:  Eat Weight Disord       Date:  2018-10-20       Impact factor: 4.652

6.  Women, Exercise, and Eating Disorder Recovery: The Normal and the Pathological.

Authors:  Hester Hockin-Boyers; Megan Warin
Journal:  Qual Health Res       Date:  2021-02-16

7.  Developing shared understandings of recovery and care: a qualitative study of women with eating disorders who resist therapeutic care.

Authors:  Connie Musolino; Megan Warin; Tracey Wade; Peter Gilchrist
Journal:  J Eat Disord       Date:  2016-12-16

8.  Drunkorexia: is it really "just" a university lifestyle choice?

Authors:  Bethany Leigh Griffin; Katharina Sophie Vogt
Journal:  Eat Weight Disord       Date:  2020-10-30       Impact factor: 4.652

9.  Right by your side? - the relational scope of health and wellbeing as congruence, complement and coincidence.

Authors:  Pelle Pelters
Journal:  Int J Qual Stud Health Well-being       Date:  2021-12

10.  Neglected features of lifestyle: Their relevance in non-alcoholic fatty liver disease.

Authors:  Francesca M Trovato; Giuseppe Fabio Martines; Daniela Brischetto; Guglielmo Trovato; Daniela Catalano
Journal:  World J Hepatol       Date:  2016-11-28
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