Chaaya Roni, Hallit Rabih, Malaeb Diana, Sakr Fouad, Dabbous Mariam, El Khatib Sami, Fekih-Romdhane Feten, Hallit Souheil, Obeid Sahar
School of Arts and Sciences, Social and Education Sciences Department, Lebanese American University, Jbeil, Lebanon.
School of Medicine and Medical Sciences, Holy Spirit University of Kaslik, Jounieh, P.O. Box 446, Lebanon.
BMC Psychiatry. 2024 Apr 26;24(1):325. doi: 10.1186/s12888-024-05762-8.
Avoidant Restrictive Food Intake Disorder (ARFID) is a new diagnosis added to the DSM-5 characterized by pathological eating habits without body image disturbances. Previous findings demonstrated a general association between high levels of perfectionism and low levels of self-esteem in association with general eating disorders. However, research is scant when it comes to ARFID specifically. Subsequently, although self-esteem is seen to moderate the association between perfectionism and general eating disorders, this research study aims to explore the same moderation but with ARFID specifically.
For this study, 515 Lebanese adults from the general Lebanese population were recruited from all over Lebanon, 60.1% of which were females. The Arabic version of the Big Three Perfectionism Scale- Short Form (BTPS-SF) was used to measure self-critical, rigid and narcissistic perfectionism; the Avoidant/Restrictive Food Intake Disorder screen (NIAS) was used to score the ARFID variable; the Arabic-Single Item Self-Esteem (A-SISE) was the scale used to measure self-esteem.
Across the different perfectionism types, self-esteem was seen to moderate the association between narcissistic perfectionism and ARFID (Beta = - 0.22; p =.006). At low (Beta = 0.77; p <.001), moderate (Beta = 0.56; p <.001) and high (Beta = 0.36; p =.001) levels of self-esteem, higher narcissistic perfectionism was significantly associated with higher ARFID scores.
This study brought to light some crucial clinical implications that highlight the need for interventions that help in the enhancement of self-esteem in patients with high perfectionism and ARFID. This study suggests that clinicians and healthcare professionals should focus more on risk factors influencing the development and maintenance of ARFID-like symptoms.
回避性限制性食物摄入障碍(ARFID)是《精神疾病诊断与统计手册》第5版中新增的一种诊断,其特征为病理性饮食习惯且无身体意象障碍。先前的研究表明,在一般饮食失调中,高水平的完美主义与低自尊之间存在普遍关联。然而,专门针对ARFID的研究却很少。随后,尽管自尊被认为可调节完美主义与一般饮食失调之间的关联,但本研究旨在专门探讨自尊对ARFID的相同调节作用。
在本研究中,从黎巴嫩各地招募了515名黎巴嫩成年人,其中60.1%为女性。使用阿拉伯语版的三大完美主义量表简版(BTPS-SF)来测量自我批判、僵化和自恋型完美主义;使用回避性/限制性食物摄入障碍筛查量表(NIAS)对ARFID变量进行评分;使用阿拉伯语单项自尊量表(A-SISE)来测量自尊。
在不同类型的完美主义中,自尊被认为可调节自恋型完美主义与ARFID之间的关联(β = -0.22;p = 0.006)。在低(β = 0.77;p < 0.001)、中(β = 0.56;p < 0.001)和高(β = 0.36;p = 0.001)自尊水平下,较高的自恋型完美主义与较高的ARFID得分显著相关。
本研究揭示了一些关键的临床意义,强调了对高完美主义和ARFID患者进行有助于提高自尊的干预措施的必要性。本研究表明,临床医生和医疗保健专业人员应更多地关注影响ARFID样症状发生和维持的风险因素。