4.0 Article

I know I am not out of control, but I just cannot shake the feeling: exploring feeling out of control in eating disorders

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s40519-021-01211-7

Keywords

Control; Food Craving Questionnaire; Eating Expectancies Inventory; Anorexia nervosa; Bulimia nervosa

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Funding

  1. National Institute of Mental Health [MH096777, MH103436]

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Individuals with anorexia and bulimia nervosa often have a fear of loss of control during eating, with differing levels of self-perceived control over food intake. Anxious traits may contribute to this fear, and intolerance of uncertainty is correlated with these issues in healthy controls specifically.
Purpose Individuals with anorexia (AN) or bulimia nervosa (BN) often present with fear of loss of control in the context of eating. It is unclear whether this fear of loss of control, which has been associated with fear of failure and a sense of not being in charge of one's own life in eating disorders, can be distinguished from self-perceived maintained control over food intake in AN. Further, anxious traits are elevated across eating disorders and could contribute to this fear of loss of control. Methods We recruited 113 adult women: restricting type AN (n = 26), BN (n = 28), and healthy controls (CW, n = 59). Participants completed the Eating Expectancies Inventory (EEI), which assesses learned expectations on the effects of eating, including whether Eating Leads to Feeling out of Control, and the Trait Food Craving Questionnaire (FCQ-T), which measures food craving and the ability to withstand those cravings, including self-perceived Lack of Control Over Eating. Results Eating Leads to Feeling out of Control was elevated in AN and BN compared to CW. Lack of Control Over Eating was similar between AN and CW but elevated in BN. Intolerance of uncertainty correlated with those measures in CW only. Conclusion Individuals with restricting-type AN experience feeling out of control when eating while maintaining self-perceived control over eating. The EEI's eating leads to feeling out of control is associated with negative self-improvement expectations. Targeting self-improvement through more functional strategies could be an important aspect in psychotherapy in AN and reduce the perceived need to restrict food intake.

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