Sommerfeldt Bente, Skårderud Finn, Kvalem Ingela Lundin, Gulliksen Kjersti, Holte Arne
Institute for Eating Disorders, Oslo, Norway.
Department of Psychology, Faculty of Social Sciences, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway.
Front Psychiatry. 2024 Jan 5;14:1323779. doi: 10.3389/fpsyt.2023.1323779. eCollection 2023.
During pregnancy and early motherhood, risks of relapse and worsening are high for women with a history of eating disorders (EDs), as are adverse sequelae for their babies. However, systematic descriptions of the processes that these women undergo through pregnancy, birth, and early motherhood are lacking, as are good descriptions of the various trajectories these women follow through pregnancy and early motherhood. This study addresses both these knowledge gaps.
We used a longitudinal research interview design, recruiting a non-clinical sample of 24 women with a history of severe EDs from routine pregnancy controls in five public, local, family health care centers in Norway. The participants were interviewed twice, first during pregnancy and then 4-6 months after delivery. Data were analyzed according to grounded theory. The focus was on modeling the trajectories of EDs through pregnancy, birth, and early motherhood. All the participants were diagnosed (DSM-5) using the Eating Disorder Examination and then completed the Eating Disorder Examination Questionnaire.
Five perceived trajectories through pregnancy and early motherhood were identified: "The mastering mother," in which an ED pathology seems to be absent through pregnancy and early motherhood; "The inadequate mother," in which the ED pathology worsens before pregnancy, through pregnancy, and early motherhood; "The overwhelmed mother," in which the ED worsens during pregnancy and early motherhood; "The depressed mother," in which the ED is put on hold during pregnancy, but worsens in early motherhood; and "The succeeding mother," in which the ED worsens during pregnancy, but reduces in early motherhood.
ED trajectories through pregnancy and early motherhood vary greatly among women with a history of EDs. This may indicate different psychological dynamics through these phases. A model with five trajectories captures a large degree of the variation. The model may help clinicians' preparedness when dealing with these patients.
对于有饮食失调病史的女性,在孕期和产后早期,复发和病情恶化的风险很高,对其婴儿也会产生不良后果。然而,目前缺乏对这些女性在孕期、分娩及产后早期经历过程的系统描述,也缺乏对她们在孕期和产后早期所经历的各种轨迹的详细描述。本研究填补了这两个知识空白。
我们采用纵向研究访谈设计,从挪威五个公共、当地家庭医疗保健中心的常规孕期检查中招募了24名有严重饮食失调病史的非临床样本女性。参与者接受了两次访谈,第一次在孕期,第二次在分娩后4至6个月。数据根据扎根理论进行分析。重点是构建饮食失调在孕期、分娩及产后早期的轨迹模型。所有参与者均使用饮食失调检查(Eating Disorder Examination)进行诊断(DSM-5),然后完成饮食失调检查问卷。
确定了五条在孕期和产后早期的感知轨迹:“掌控型母亲”,即饮食失调病理在孕期和产后早期似乎不存在;“不称职母亲”,即饮食失调病理在怀孕前、孕期及产后早期恶化;“不堪重负的母亲”,即饮食失调在孕期和产后早期恶化;“抑郁母亲”,即饮食失调在孕期被搁置,但在产后早期恶化;“成功母亲”,即饮食失调在孕期恶化,但在产后早期减轻。
有饮食失调病史的女性在孕期和产后早期的饮食失调轨迹差异很大。这可能表明这些阶段存在不同的心理动态。一个包含五条轨迹的模型捕捉到了很大程度的差异。该模型可能有助于临床医生在处理这些患者时做好准备。