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Perspectives on eating disorders and service provision: A qualitative study of healthcare professionals

Perspectives on eating disorders and service provision: A qualitative study of healthcare professionals
Perspectives on eating disorders and service provision: A qualitative study of healthcare professionals
The study examined healthcare professionals' perspectives of eating disorder patients and services. Qualitative semi-structured interviews were conducted with 18 healthcare professionals resulting in two themes. First, the practical difficulties of meeting the complex service needs of people with eating disorders were illustrated. Second, staff recognised patient diversity and the consequent need for individualised interventions. Services are frustrated in meeting patient needs due to complex resource limitations, which do not amount only to lack of funding. Rather than eating disordered patients being viewed as 'difficult', as reported in previous qualitative research, they are only difficult in a context of limited resources
1072-4133
390-398
Reid, Marie
9c3c9f80-277f-43b8-ac8c-29f9c527e196
Williams, Sarah
f98f47db-b1d6-42c2-b0eb-7c0cb9a981d0
Burr, Jennifer
839aa0b6-6263-4a6b-8fb6-669838ebdd6d
Reid, Marie
9c3c9f80-277f-43b8-ac8c-29f9c527e196
Williams, Sarah
f98f47db-b1d6-42c2-b0eb-7c0cb9a981d0
Burr, Jennifer
839aa0b6-6263-4a6b-8fb6-669838ebdd6d

Reid, Marie, Williams, Sarah and Burr, Jennifer (2010) Perspectives on eating disorders and service provision: A qualitative study of healthcare professionals. European Eating Disorders Review, 18 (5), 390-398. (doi:10.1002/erv.976).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The study examined healthcare professionals' perspectives of eating disorder patients and services. Qualitative semi-structured interviews were conducted with 18 healthcare professionals resulting in two themes. First, the practical difficulties of meeting the complex service needs of people with eating disorders were illustrated. Second, staff recognised patient diversity and the consequent need for individualised interventions. Services are frustrated in meeting patient needs due to complex resource limitations, which do not amount only to lack of funding. Rather than eating disordered patients being viewed as 'difficult', as reported in previous qualitative research, they are only difficult in a context of limited resources

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Published date: September 2010

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 191135
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/191135
ISSN: 1072-4133
PURE UUID: f80439cd-39ec-42ad-bafd-51dd9ec2a943

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Date deposited: 17 Jun 2011 07:37
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 03:43

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Contributors

Author: Marie Reid
Author: Sarah Williams
Author: Jennifer Burr

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