PLoS ONE (Jan 2020)

Parental feeding practices and the relationship with parents in female adolescents and young adults with eating disorders: A case control study.

  • Maria Gruber,
  • Daniel König,
  • Julika Holzhäuser,
  • Deirdre Maria Castillo,
  • Victor Blüml,
  • Rebecca Jahn,
  • Carmen Leser,
  • Sonja Werneck-Rohrer,
  • Harald Werneck

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0242518
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 11
p. e0242518

Abstract

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ObjectivePerceived parental influence on diet in early adolescence in the context of the parental relationship had previously not been studied in a clinical sample. The aim of this study was to investigate a possible association between eating disorders and characteristics of the relationship with parents and the parental feeding practices in early adolescence.Methods21 female adolescents and young adults with an eating disorder (ED)-bulimia nervosa or anorexia nervosa-and 22 females without eating disorder (healthy control; HC), aged between 16 and 26, were assessed via self-report questionnaires for problematic eating behaviour, relationship with parents, perceptions of parent's feeding practices at the age of 10-13 years and personality. Statistical evaluation was performed by means of group comparisons, effect sizes, regression analyses and mediator analyses.ResultsAdolescent and young adult females with ED reported more fears/overprotection and rejection/neglect by their mothers and less self-responsibility in terms of eating behaviour during adolescence than did the HC. The relationship with the fathers did not differ significantly. Females who perceived more cohesion, rejection/neglect and fears/overprotection by the mother were more likely to suffer from an ED. Rejection/neglect by both parents were associated with less self-acceptance of the young females with even stronger effect sizes for the fathers than the mothers. Harm prevention in the young females was a partial mediator between fears/overprotection and the drive for thinness.ConclusionsThe parental relationship is partly reflected in the self-acceptance and self-responsibility in eating of the adolescent and young females, both of them are particularly affected in EDs. Stressors in the parent-child relationship should be targeted in treatment of eating disorders. Nutritional counselling for parents might be useful in early adolescence.