A handful of studies have investigated childhood physical abuse or family violence in addition to sexual abuse in eating disorders. To our knowledge, no study has yet examined other potentially importand forms of abuse in patients with eating disorders, particularly psychological abuse, in spite of its importance as part of the spectrum of childhood abuse. Finally, although studies of female psychiatric inpatients and outpatients have demonstrated that the endurance of multiple forms of abuse in childhood (i.e., both sexual and physical abuse) has more deleterious effects than one form alone, as far as we know no investigation in the child abuse/eating disorder literature has yet examined the possible compounding effects of endurin several forms of child abuse on eating pathology.
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We hypothesized that the bulima nervosa group would have experienced significantly more sexual, physical and psychological abuse than their peers who did not have eating disorder. The proportion of sexually abused subjects in the bulima nervosa group (28.8%, N=23) and comparison group (20.0%, N=8) did not differ significantly (p=0.38, Fisher's exact test). However, a significantly greater proportion of bulima nervosa subjects (17.5%, N=14) met criteria for physical abuse than comparison subjects (2.5%, N=1) (p < 0.02, Fisher's exact test). Moreover, the bulima nervosa group reported significantly more maternal psychological maltreatment (t=3.31, df=118, p<0.002) and paternal psychological maltreatment than comparison subjects (t=4.26, df=108, p<0.0001). When we used this study's definition of psychological abuse, a significantly greater proportion of bulima nervosa subjects (76.3%, N=61) reported psychological abuse by at least one of the parent than did the comparison subjects (37.5%, N=15) (p<0.0001, Fisher's exact test)
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Our study has several strenghts. [...] Finally, our use of strict criteria for child abuse mitigates against the problem encountered in some studies in which abuse is defined so liberally as to be almost meaningless. [...]
Childhood Sexual, Physical, and Psychological Abuse Reported by Bulima Nervosa Subjects (40 Recovered and 40 Nonrecovered) and a Comparison group Form of abuse Bulima Nervosa (N=80) Comparison Subjects (N=40) N % N % --------------------------------------------------------------------------- None 15 18.8 19 47.5 Sexual 3 3.8 6 15.0 Sexual and physical 0 0.0 0 0.0 Sexual and psychol. 13 16.3 2 5.0 Physical 1 1.3 0 0.0 Physical and psych. 6 7.5 1 2.5 Psychological 35 43.8 12 30.0 Sexual, physical 7 8.8 0 0.0 and psychological