The University of Sheffield School of Nursing & Midwifery, Centre for Health & Social Care Studies and Service Development, Samuel Fox House, Northern General Hospital, Herries Road, Sheffield, United Kingdom.
J Clin Nurs. 2009 Mar;18(6):874-83. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2702.2008.02528.x.
This paper seeks to explain how bulimic mothers accommodated infant feeding demands in conjunction with managing their disordered eating practices.
Eating disorders are chronic and disabling illnesses primarily affecting women. There are few qualitative studies describing bulimia in the context of motherhood.
The study employed an inductive qualitative approach.
A purposive sample of childbearing women (n = 16), who self-defined as living with an eating disorder, were recruited. Data were generated from one-to-one interviews; a thematic analysis identified key issues.
Participants were primarily responsible for ensuring child/ren's socialisation processes, including modelling appropriate dietary behaviours and these demands often conflicted with their personal needs for food restraint. Pressures to participate in social activities with children were widely experienced as stressful especially when these events focused on food. Participants viewed early and repeated exposure to 'healthy' eating as protective against their children acquiring an eating disorder and in this respect commercial child-care facilities provided alternative environments for children to explore food-related activities.
Participants employed a variety of strategies to ensure children's exposure to normalising influences and socialising processes. Concerns about personal competencies with respect to food preparation and storage were articulated by all participants.
Professionals involved with providing care to mothers and their infants are well placed to support bulimic clients and to foster confidence in their mothering skills. Early and appropriate intervention is key to effecting positive changes in bulimic patterns, with potential benefits to women's future health and well-being and that of their children.
本文旨在解释贪食症母亲如何在满足婴儿喂养需求的同时,管理自己的饮食失调行为。
饮食失调是一种主要影响女性的慢性和致残性疾病。很少有定性研究描述了母亲身份背景下的贪食症。
本研究采用了归纳性定性方法。
招募了 16 名自认为患有饮食障碍的生育期妇女作为有目的的样本。数据来自一对一的访谈;主题分析确定了关键问题。
参与者主要负责确保孩子/儿童的社会化过程,包括为孩子树立适当的饮食行为榜样,而这些需求往往与他们个人对食物控制的需求相冲突。参与者普遍感到与孩子一起参加社交活动的压力很大,尤其是当这些活动集中在食物上时。参与者认为早期和反复接触“健康”饮食可以防止孩子患上饮食障碍,在这方面,商业儿童保育设施为孩子提供了探索与食物相关活动的替代环境。
参与者采用了多种策略来确保孩子接触到正常化的影响和社会化过程。所有参与者都表达了对食物准备和储存方面个人能力的担忧。
为母亲及其婴儿提供护理的专业人员非常适合支持贪食症患者,并增强他们的母亲技能信心。早期和适当的干预是改变贪食模式的关键,这对女性未来的健康和福祉以及孩子的健康和福祉都有潜在的好处。