Journal of Eating Disorders (Feb 2025)

Equity in eating disorders: a dialectical approach to stigma, expertise, and the coproduction of knowledge

  • James Downs,
  • Marissa Adams,
  • Anita Federici,
  • Sam L. Sharpe,
  • Agnes Ayton

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s40337-024-01176-9
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 1
pp. 1 – 13

Abstract

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Abstract Within mental health research, there has been a growing recognition of the importance of the knowledge obtained through lived experiences of illness, treatment, recovery, and health. In recent years, the field of eating disorders has seen an emergence of co-produced knowledge, in particular in the co-design of patient-facing materials for use in clinical settings, and a growing body of rich qualitative research by those who may straddle the identities of clinician, researcher and person with lived/living experience. However, there are significant variations in how expertise by experience is defined and utilised within research and clinical practice, and persisting inequities in the extent to which people with lived experience are afforded the agency to define their illnesses and treatment. This paper's authorship is a collaboration between those with personal and professional relationships with the subject of eating disorders, bringing to life the concept of sharing power and decision-making across multiple viewpoints and identities. Situating knowledge about eating disorders and stigma within a wider historical and philosophical context, the authors argue that persisting inequities in research and clinical practice are rooted in multiple stigmas. To address this, a ‘dialectical’ stance is proposed, which draws upon Dialectical Behaviour Therapy and broader principles of coproduction to offer a practical approach to operationalising epistemic justice and dismantling stigma in the field.

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