Authors
Nicola Rance, Victoria Clarke, Naomi Moller
Publication date
2017/6
Journal
Counselling and Psychotherapy Research
Volume
17
Issue
2
Pages
127-136
Description
Aim
Women with anorexia are often perceived very negatively – for example, as manipulative and deceitful – both by wider society and treatment providers. In this context, it is important for practitioners to understand the experience of living with this illness, but there is very little empirical research focused on the everyday phenomenology of anorexia. This study aimed to expand this limited literature by ‘giving voice’ to the lived experience of women with anorexia.
Method
A purposive sample of 12 women – 11 with a formal diagnosis of AN as a result of NHS treatment and one with a long behavioural history of dietary restriction who had received private treatment – who saw themselves as recovered, or in recovery, from anorexia nervosa participated in semi‐structured interviews. The women were asked about the history of their eating disorder, their understandings of its cause and experiences of seeking help and …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
N Rance, V Clarke, N Moller - Counselling and Psychotherapy Research, 2017