| Literature DB >> 29720107 |
Sarah Fogarty1, Rakime Elmir2,3, Phillipa Hay4, Virginia Schmied3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Pregnancy is a time of enormous body transformation. For those with an eating disorder during pregnancy this time of transformation can be distressing and damaging to both the mother and the child. In this meta-ethnographic study, we aimed to examine the experiences of women with an Eating Disorder in the perinatal period; that is during pregnancy and two years following birth.Entities:
Keywords: Anorexia nervosa; Bulimia nervosa; Eating disorders; Meta-synthesis; Midwives; Perinatal; Pregnancy; Qualitative research; Women
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29720107 PMCID: PMC5932857 DOI: 10.1186/s12884-018-1762-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Pregnancy Childbirth ISSN: 1471-2393 Impact factor: 3.007
The 7 steps of the Noblit and Hare meta-ethnographic method [33]
| Steps | ||
|---|---|---|
| Step 1 | Getting started | These steps involve defining the search criteria and parameters, conducting the search, including, quality assessment and excluding studies [ |
| Step 2 | Confirming the initial interest | |
| Step 3 | Reading studies | |
| Step 4 | Extracting date from included studies | This step involves extracting data from the included studies and ‘determining how studies are related’ and identifying common themes, and concepts [ |
| Step 5 | Translating Studies | This step involves ‘comparing first and/or second order themes against each other [ |
| Step 6 | Synthesising translations | This step creates new third order themes from first and second order concepts. |
| Step 7 | Expressing the synthesis | This step the authors expressing the synthesis implications in relation to clinical practice, policy, treatment, program development and/or research [ |
Fig. 1Flow chart of study selection
Fig. 2Reciprocal and line of argument concepts
Characteristics of included papers/literature
| Author (Year) | Country | Participants N, age, ED features | Study aim/objective | Study design/methodology & transparency | Rigour of analysis and reporting |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Journal Articles | |||||
| Burton et al. 2015 [ | Perth, Australia. | 20 women, aged between 21 and 40, with an eating disorder diagnosis and who had birthed within the last 12 months. 8 had Anorexia Nervosa(AN), 4 had Bulimia Nervosa (BN), BED or Eating Disorder Not Otherwise Specified (EDNOS). Other 12 not accounted for re eating disorder (ED) diagnosis. | Nothing about those who chose not to take place in the study. | ||
| Patel et al. 2005 [ | United Kingdom. | 6 mothers, mean age (range 29–42) with either Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disease IV (DSM-IV) BN or EDNOS and 9 mothers, mean age 33.6 (range 28–43) at risk for an eating disorder (high concerns about body weight and shape but little behavioural disturbance). | Nothing about those who chose not to take place in the study. | ||
| Shaffer et al. 2008 [ | USA | 10 women with a self-reported history of an eating disorder during pregnancy, age range 26–39. | Nothing about those who chose not to take place in the study. | ||
| Stapleton et al. 2008 [ | United Kingdom. | 16 women who self-reported as having an eating disorder, age range 23–44 years. | Limited data on the critical examination undertaken or the researchers role in the analysis | ||
| Taborelli et al. 2015 [ | United Kingdom. | 12 women with severe eating disorders during pregnancy (8 with Anorexia Nervosa Binge-purge (AN-BP) and 4 with BN), age range 23–39. | No information on dropouts during the data collection. | ||
| Stringer et al. 2010 [ | United Kingdom. | 8 women with self reported AN or BN, mean age 29.4 years. | Limited data on the critical examination undertaken or the researchers role in the analysis | ||
| Willis & Rand 1988 [ | USA. | 4 women who meet the criteria (DSM-III) for BN. | Age of women not reported. | ||
| Case Studies | |||||
| Hollifield & Hobdy 1990 [ | USA. | 3 women with DSM diagnosis of BN, aged 23–31, from an eating disorder therapy group who became pregnant. | Aim: To present the experiences of three pregnant women with BN whose experience of pregnancy did not match the current literature. | No information on the duration or the type of questions asked during the interview. | |
| Lewis & le Grange 1994 [ | South Africa. | 6 mothers aged 27–45 years, with a DSM-IV diagnosis of BN. | |||
| Little & Lowkes 2000 [ | USA | 3 women with anorexic-bulimic symptoms aged 28–36 years. | Not stated what eating disorder the participants were suffering from. | ||
| Namer et al. 1986 [ | USA | 6 women, mean age 28.7 years, with AN. | |||
First and second order themes related to the experience of pregnancy for those with an eating disorder as reported in the primary paper
| Publication | Theme 1 | Theme 2 | Theme 3 | Theme 4 | Theme 5 | Theme 6 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Journal Publications | ||||||
| Burton et al. 2015 [ | “The battle” between the eating disorder, your body and the baby. | “Going around on the treadmill” – dealing with the eating disorder and the pregnancy and doing the same thing all the time; exhaustion. | “Recreational show ride”- highs and lows and feeling of being out of control. | “Walking the tightrope”- Staying in control and stopping from falling. | “Teetering on the edge”- Feeling like about to fall off into the unknown. | “Uninvited visitor from the past” – Known but unwanted visitor (ED) returning. |
| Patel et al. 2005 [ | Loss of pre-pregnancy self | Life transitions | Relationship with family members | Role within wider society | ||
| Shaffer et al. 2008 [ | A constant mental battle to prevent losing control | A distorted body image | Hiding their experience | Scale-induced trauma at prenatal visits | ||
| Stapleton et al. 2008 [ | Fighting to control the urge to restrict or binge-purge. | Lack of disclosure of their eating disorder to maternity health professionals | ||||
| Taborelli et al. 2015 [ | Approaching pregnancy: Not expecting to be pregnant | Early pregnancy | Middle to late pregnancy | |||
| Stringer et al. 2010 [ | Transforming body and eating behaviours | Uncertainties about child’s shape | Emotional regulation | Professional awareness | Type of care | |
| Willis & Rand 1988 [ | Decrease in binge/vomiting behaviours during pregnancy. | SIV occurred during pregnancy. | Mixed reporting of eating disorders to obstetric/maternal health care providers. | |||
| Case Studies | ||||||
| Hollifield & Hobdy 1990 [ | Hiding the Eating disorder from obstetricians and other health care personal. | Lied about specific behaviours to their spouse/therapists/family/friends. | Experienced tremendous fears regarding health and wellbeing of their unborn child. | Profound shame and guilt in relation to their inability to refrain from bulimic practices while pregnant. | Rationalisation of behaviours. | |
| Lewis & le Grange 1994 [ | Fear of losing control of their eating and weight during pregnancy. | Fear of damaging their unborn child as a result of their unhealthy eating behaviours. | Fear not enough to stop them from engaging in bulimic behavior. | Anxiety about their ability to cope when their baby was born. | Anxiety about the health of their unborn child. | |
| Little & Lowkes 2000 [ | Hiding the Eating disorder. | Difficulty giving up the eating disorder behavior. | ||||
| Namer et al. 1986 [ | Positive benefits- | Change in body image- | Change in eating habits- | Effects on marital relationship- | Mood states and cognitive concerns during pregnancy- | Strong desire not to pass on food obsession to their child. |
First and second order themes related to the experience of post-pregnancy for those with an eating disorder as reported in the primary papers
| Publication | Theme 1 | Theme 2 | Theme 3 | Theme 4 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Journal Publications | ||||
| Namer et al. 1986 [ | All lost pregnancy related weight gain, some weighted less. | No longer eating 3–4 meals or quantity of food eaten during pregnancy. | All returned to anorexic thinking within several weeks of giving birth. | Anxiety about breastfeeding. |
| Patel et al. 2005 [ | Loss of pre-pregnancy self | Feeding relationship with infant | Relationship with family members | |
| Shaffer et al. 2008 [ | Post-partum panic and fear | Preconception with body image | Worsening of eating disorder symptoms after birth. | |
| Stapleton et al. 2008 [ | Benefits for not breastfeeding | Perceived positives for breastfeeding | Bottle-feeding | Distress about post pregnancy shape and weight. |
| Taborelli et al. 2015 [ | Loss of the pre-pregnancy body identity, loss of pregnant identity. | Subsequent pregnancies | ||
| Tierney et al. 2011 [ | Fear of failure | Emotional regulation | ||
| Willis & Rand 1988 [ | Majority returned to their pregnancy binge/vomiting levels | Extreme distress about post partum body shape prompted relapse. | ||
| Case Studies | ||||
| Little & Lowkes 2000 [ | Increase of eating disorder behaviours postpartum. |
Third order themes: Translation of themes related to pregnancy across the 12 primary studies
| Relates to: | Themes | Paper origin |
|---|---|---|
| During the pregnancy | A time of tumultuous change | Burton 2015 |
| New context to view body | Namer 1986 | |
| ‘Hiding it’ | Shaffer et al. 2008 | |
| The safety of my child | Namer 1986 | |
| Post pregnancy- mother | An overwhelming desire to lose weight | Namer 1986 |