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Journal Article

Citation

Schoemaker C, Smit F, Bijl RV, Vollebergh WA. Int. J. Eat. Disord. 2002; 32(4): 381-388.

Affiliation

Trimbos Institute, The Netherlands Institute of Mental Health and Addiction, Utrecht, The Netherlands. cschoemaker@trimbos.nl

Copyright

(Copyright © 2002, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1002/eat.10102

PMID

12386903

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To unravel the complex role of child abuse as a risk factor for bulima nervosa (BN), from the perspective of the self-medication hypothesis which asserts that in abused BN cases binge eating is primarily a way of coping with the anxiety or mood disorders that stem from the abuse. METHOD: In a population-based study (N = 1,987) DSM-III-R diagnoses were assessed with the CIDI. Differences in exposure rates to child abuse between BN cases versus healthy, psychiatric, substance use, and dual diagnosis controls were employed to test the self-medication hypothesis. RESULTS: A history of psychological or multiple abuse was found to be a specific risk factor for dual diagnosis disorder (cases with psychiatric and substance use disorders) and for BN. Nearly all BN cases that experienced multiple or psychological child abuse, showed such comorbid anxiety or mood disorders. DISCUSSION: We found tentative support for the self-medication hypothesis.


Language: en

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