1. Family meal frequency among children and adolescents with eating disorders.
- Author
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Elran-Barak R, Sztainer M, Goldschmidt AB, and Le Grange D
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Analysis of Variance, Anorexia Nervosa diagnosis, Anorexia Nervosa epidemiology, Anorexia Nervosa psychology, Bulimia Nervosa diagnosis, Bulimia Nervosa epidemiology, Bulimia Nervosa psychology, Chicago, Child, Feeding and Eating Disorders diagnosis, Feeding and Eating Disorders psychology, Female, Humans, Interviews as Topic, Male, Regression Analysis, Body Mass Index, Family Relations, Feeding and Eating Disorders epidemiology, Meals psychology
- Abstract
Purpose: Previous studies on family meals and disordered eating have mainly drawn their samples from the general population. The goal of the current study is to determine family meal frequency among children and adolescents with anorexia nervosa (AN), bulimia nervosa (BN), and feeding or eating disorder not elsewhere classified (FED-NEC) and to examine whether family meal frequency is associated with eating disorder psychopathology., Methods: Participants included 154 children and adolescents (M = 14.92 ± 2.62), who met criteria for AN (n = 60), BN (n = 32), or FED-NEC (n = 62). All participants completed the Eating Disorder Examination and the Family Meal Questionnaire prior to treatment at the University of Chicago Eating Disorders Program., Results: AN and BN participants significantly differed in terms of family meal frequency. A majority of participants with AN (71.7%), compared with less than half (43.7%) of participants with BN, reported eating dinner with their family frequently (five or more times per week). Family meal frequency during dinner was significantly and negatively correlated with dietary restraints and eating concerns among participants with BN (r = -.381, r = -.366, p < .05) and FED-NEC (r = -.340, r = -.276, p < .05)., Conclusions: AN patients' higher family meal frequency may be explained by their parents' relatively greater vigilance over eating, whereas families of BN patients may be less aware of eating disorder behaviors and hence less insistent upon family meals. Additionally, children and adolescents with AN may be more inhibited and withdrawn and therefore are perhaps more likely to stay at home and eat together with their families., (Copyright © 2014 Society for Adolescent Health and Medicine. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2014
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