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Anorexia nervosa and family relationships: perceived family functioning, coping strategies, beliefs, and attachment to parents and peers

Anorexia nervosa and family relationships: perceived family functioning, coping strategies, beliefs, and attachment to parents and peers

Cunha, Ana Isabel

;

Relvas, Ana Paula

; Soares, Isabel
| Asociación Española de Psicología Conductual (AEPC) | 2009 | URI

Artigo de Jornal

This ex post facto study explored the differences in perceived family characteristics between a group of 34 female patients with anorexia nervosa and 34 females without eating pathology. All participants filled out the following self-report scales: FACES II, F-COPES, IPPA and the Family Beliefs Questionnaire. The results showed that, in contrast with participants without pathology, patients perceived their families as less cohesive and less capable of redefining stressful events in order to make them more manageable. However, they perceived their families as being more able to acquire and accept help, and presented more family beliefs related to a sense of an individual responsibility/self-blaming. In addition, patients seemed to trust less their mothers and peers and to communicate less with their peers, and to show more detachment to mothers, fathers, and peers. Of all studied variables, detachment from friends and mother, as well as perceived higher family capacity to seek out community resources and accept help were the most important variables to the discrimination between groups.
Este estudio ex post facto ha explorado las diferencias entre la percepción
de características familiares de 34 mujeres jóvenes con anorexia nerviosa y 34 mujeres jóvenes sin patología alimentaria. Todas las participantes completaron los siguientes
instrumentos de auto-respuesta: FACES II, F-COPES, IPPA y el Cuestionario de
Creencias Familiares. Los resultados demostraron que, en comparación con el grupo de
mujeres sin patología alimentaria, las pacientes consideran a sus familias menos unidas
y menos capaces de redefinir de una forma más aceptable las experiencias y situaciones
de estrés. Sin embargo, consideran a sus familias más capaces de buscar y aceptar
ayuda, y presentan más creencias familiares relacionadas con la responsabilidad individual/auto-censura. En comparación con el grupo sin patología alimentaria, las pacientes parecen confiar menos en sus madres y amigos, parecen comunicarse menos con
los amigos, y tienden a demostrar una mayor alienación en relación a la madre, al padre
y a los amigos. De todas las variables en estudio, la alienación en relación a los amigos
y a la madre, así como la mayor capacidad para buscar y aceptar ayuda fueron las
variables más importantes para discriminar los grupos.

Publicação

Ano de Publicação: 2009

Editora: Asociación Española de Psicología Conductual (AEPC)

Identificadores

ISSN: 1697-2600