| Literature DB >> 32905371 |
Vanessa Lawrence1, Ulrike Schmidt2,3, Rachel Potterton2, Amelia Austin2, Karina Allen2,3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Eating disorders (EDs) typically have their onset during adolescence or the transition to adulthood. Emerging adulthood (~ 18-25 years) is a developmental phase which conceptually overlaps with adolescence but also has unique characteristics (e.g. increased independence). Emerging adults tend to come to ED services later in illness than adolescents, and emerging adulthood's unique characteristics may contribute to such delays.Entities:
Keywords: Anorexia nervosa; Bulimia nervosa; Eating disorders; Emerging adulthood; Help-seeking
Year: 2020 PMID: 32905371 PMCID: PMC7469268 DOI: 10.1186/s40337-020-00320-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Eat Disord ISSN: 2050-2974
Steps of thematic analysis
| Transcribe; read and re-read data-set; note down initial ideas | |
| Code data-set | |
| Collate codes into potential themes | |
| Check themes against coded extracts and the entire data set; generate a thematic map | |
| Refine the specifics of each theme; generate clear names and definitions | |
| Select and analyse quotations; write a report of the analysis |
Participant Demographics
| Interviewed | Declined / DNR to Interview Request | |
|---|---|---|
| Age (at first specialist contact) | 20.16 (2.46) | |
| DUED (months) | 19.37 (9.42) | |
| BMI (at first specialist contact) | 20.47 (5.23) | |
| EDE-Q total score (at first specialist contact) | 3.78 (1.23)* | |
| Gender | 93% female ( | 94% female ( |
| Eating Disorder Diagnosis | ||
| AN | 5 (35.71%) | 11 (35.48%) |
| BN | 5 (35.71%) | 10 (32.26%) |
| BED | 1 (7.14%) | 1 (3.23%) |
| OSFED | 3 (21.43%) | 9 (29.03%) |
| Ethnicity | ||
| White | 10 (71.43%) | 18 (58.06%) |
| Asian | 0 (0%) | 3 (9.68%) |
| Black | 0 (0%) | 2 (6.45%) |
| Mixed | 2 (14.29%) | 3 (9.68%) |
| Unspecified | 2 (14.29%) | 5 (16.13%) |
| Occupation | ||
| Student | 7 (50.0%) | 17 (54.83%) |
| Employed | 7 (50.0%) | 10 (32.26%) |
| Unemployed | 0 (0%) | 2 (6.45%) |
| Unknown | 0 (0%) | 2 (6.45%) |
| Living Situation | ||
| With family | 5 (35.71%) | 19 (61.29%) |
| With peers | 7 (50.0%) | 8 (25.80%) |
| With partner | 0 (0%) | 2 (6.45%) |
| Alone | 0 (0%) | 2 (6.45%) |
| Other / Unspecified | 2 (14.29%) | 0 (0%) |
* These figures were significantly different at p < 0.05
Abbreviations: AN anorexia nervosa, BMI body mass index, BN bulimia nervosa, DNR did not respond, DUED duration of untreated eating disorder, EDE-Q Eating Disorder Examination Questionnaire, OSFED other specified feeding or eating disorder, M mean, SD standard deviation
Fig. 1Attitudinal stages and their implications for help-seeking
Clinical Implications
| Predominant attitude towards help-seeking | Implications for help-seeking interventions |
|---|---|
Focus on enhancing motivation to seek help (e.g. using motivational interviewing techniques) Support family / friends to raise concerns and encourage placatory help-seeking | |
Focus on inter-relatedness of ED and other difficulties (e.g. low mood; physical health) Increase awareness amongst professionals likely to have routine contact during transitions of increased openness to receiving help Streamline registration/appointment-booking processes at likely help-seeking avenues (e.g. GP) Encourage family/ friends to scaffold help-seeking (e.g. booking appointments) | |
Focus on mapping negative effects of eating difficulties / clarifying preferred life directions, rather than slotting into diagnostic categories Integrate help-seeking interventions with self-help resources Communicate the importance of confidentiality Facilitate circumnavigation of face-to-face communication (e.g. emails; texts) at likely help-seeking avenues |