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Journal Article

Citation

Kopland MCG, Vrabel KA, Landt MSO, Hoffart A, Johnson SU, Giltay EJ. Eur. Eat. Disord. Rev. 2024; ePub(ePub): ePub.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2024, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1002/erv.3121

PMID

39003600

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Recovery processes during residential treatment for eating disorders, especially in patients with a history of maltreatment, are insufficiently understood. This study aimed to explore the temporal relationships among comorbid factors, including depression, anxiety, and self-compassion, with the influence of childhood maltreatment.

METHOD: Using Dynamic Time Warp (DTW), weekly scores from the Symptom Checklist-5, Eating Disorder Examination, and Self-Compassion Scale were analysed over 12 weeks. The study generated undirected and directed networks to identify influential symptoms in a transdiagnostic sample, comparing patients with and without childhood maltreatment.

RESULTS: The study included 124 patients with eating disorders (ED) (97% women), mean age of 30.9 years (SD = 9.7, range 18-61 years). Diagnoses included anorexia nervosa (26%), bulimia nervosa (38%), and other specified feeding and eating disorders (36%). The directed DTW network showed that hopelessness, worrying, and restlessness had the highest out-strength, predicting changes in self-compassion and ED behaviour. In maltreatment cases, hopelessness and low acceptance predicted changes, while worry, restlessness, and nervousness were predictive in non-maltreatment cases.

CONCLUSION: Temporal network analyses suggest that a change in hopelessness, worrying, and restlessness drives symptom improvement in ED behaviour and the development of self-compassion during residential treatment. These processes vary between patients with and without a history of childhood maltreatment separately, indicating the need for further analyses.


Language: en

Keywords

clinical; co‐morbidity; in‐patient

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