Binge eating disorder: general practitioners' constructs of an ambiguous pathology
Binge eating disorder: general practitioners' constructs of an ambiguous pathology
Eating disorders are amongst the most commonly encountered psychiatric disorders experienced by young women. Binge eating disorder (BED) has received some support as a distinct pathology, but is hard to disentangle from other kinds of behaviours. This qualitative study explored awareness and knowledge of BED amongst a group of 18 inner-city general practitioners in NW England. Thematic coding of their accounts suggested a dichotomous tension. (1) Subjects were largely unaware of the existence of BED, and found it difficult to conceptualize its diagnosis and management in primary care. (2) Subjects framed BED as a ‘disorder’ that was firmly within the sphere of patients' personal responsibility, and recognized that psychological distress would be an important causal factor in its aetiology. Subjects were reluctant to consider BED as a diagnosis for obese patients because of the absence of services for onward referral, and because of uncertainties about effective treatment
anorexia, binge-eating, bulimia, eating disorders, obesity
301-306
Henderson, Elizabeth
786fd795-9ca8-489f-902b-61e286af8895
May, Carl
17697f8d-98f6-40d3-9cc0-022f04009ae4
Chew-Graham, Carolyn A.
28f3f383-6b7f-492f-9ffa-8422d7239c9c
October 2003
Henderson, Elizabeth
786fd795-9ca8-489f-902b-61e286af8895
May, Carl
17697f8d-98f6-40d3-9cc0-022f04009ae4
Chew-Graham, Carolyn A.
28f3f383-6b7f-492f-9ffa-8422d7239c9c
Henderson, Elizabeth, May, Carl and Chew-Graham, Carolyn A.
(2003)
Binge eating disorder: general practitioners' constructs of an ambiguous pathology.
Primary Health Care Research & Development, 4 (4), .
(doi:10.1191/1463423603pc161oa).
Abstract
Eating disorders are amongst the most commonly encountered psychiatric disorders experienced by young women. Binge eating disorder (BED) has received some support as a distinct pathology, but is hard to disentangle from other kinds of behaviours. This qualitative study explored awareness and knowledge of BED amongst a group of 18 inner-city general practitioners in NW England. Thematic coding of their accounts suggested a dichotomous tension. (1) Subjects were largely unaware of the existence of BED, and found it difficult to conceptualize its diagnosis and management in primary care. (2) Subjects framed BED as a ‘disorder’ that was firmly within the sphere of patients' personal responsibility, and recognized that psychological distress would be an important causal factor in its aetiology. Subjects were reluctant to consider BED as a diagnosis for obese patients because of the absence of services for onward referral, and because of uncertainties about effective treatment
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Published date: October 2003
Keywords:
anorexia, binge-eating, bulimia, eating disorders, obesity
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Local EPrints ID: 163491
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/163491
ISSN: 1463-4236
PURE UUID: e4295a01-2e49-4955-8917-af5da970d64f
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Date deposited: 09 Sep 2010 09:01
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 02:05
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Contributors
Author:
Elizabeth Henderson
Author:
Carl May
Author:
Carolyn A. Chew-Graham
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