AI Article Synopsis

  • Mothers with eating disorders often worry about the potential impact on their children and the risk of passing those issues down to them.
  • The study involved interviews with 18 mothers from the UK, USA, and Australia, focusing on their experiences and support needs regarding eating disorders.
  • Key findings highlighted themes such as maternal reflections on their own eating disorders, strategies to prevent passing on these issues, communication about their disorders with their children, and the support they feel they need to break the cycle of eating disorders in the family.

Article Abstract

Background: Studies indicate that the children of mothers who have eating disorders are at an increased risk of developing eating disorders themselves. The aim of this qualitative study was to broaden and extend current understandings of the experiences of mothers with eating disorders. The present report focuses on maternal perspectives, experiences, and support needs in relation to the intergenerational transmission of eating disorders.

Method: Semi-structured online interviews were conducted with parents living in the UK, USA, and Australia. Participants were eighteen mothers with a self-reported lifetime diagnosis of one or more eating disorders, who had experienced symptoms since becoming a parent, and who had at least one child aged 2 years or older. Data were analysed using reflexive thematic analysis.

Results: Four major themes relating to the impacts of having an eating disorder on children and intergenerational transmission were identified. These were: impacts (maternal perspectives on the ways having an eating disorder impacted their children, and their reflections around having been impacted by their own parents); breaking the cycle (strategies employed by mothers in efforts to prevent their children developing eating disorders of their own); communicating about the eating disorder (maternal experiences around disclosing or not disclosing having an eating disorder to their children); and support needs (maternal and perceived familial support needs in relation to breaking cycles of intergenerational transmission).

Conclusions: For mothers with eating disorders, concerns about the potential impacts on their children and fears about intergenerational transmission are salient, and these may vary for children at different ages. The mothers who participated in our study described engaging in a number of conscious strategies in efforts to manage the risks of eating disorder development in their children, but implementing these strategies was not without challenges. Implications for preventative programs to reduce the intergenerational transmission of eating disorders are discussed.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11344927PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s40337-024-01088-8DOI Listing

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