Content area

Abstract

Background

Several problems with the classification and diagnosis of eating disorders (EDs) have been identified, including proliferation of ‘other specified’ diagnoses, within-disorder heterogeneity, and frequent diagnostic migration over time. Beyond problems within EDs, past research suggested that EDs fit better in a spectrum of internalizing psychopathology (characterized by mood and anxiety disorders) than in a separate diagnostic class.

Purpose

To develop a transdiagnostic, hierarchical-dimensional model relevant to ED psychopathology that: 1) reduces diagnostic heterogeneity, 2) includes important dimensions of internalizing psychopathology that are often excluded from ED diagnostic models, and 3) predicts clinical impairment.

Procedures

Goldberg's (2006) method and exploratory structural equation modeling were used to identify a hierarchical model of internalizing in community-recruited adults with EDs (N=207).

Findings

The lowest level of the hierarchy was characterized by 15 factors that defined specific aspects of eating, mood, and anxiety disorders. At the two-factor level, Internalizing bifurcated into Distress (low well-being, body dissatisfaction, suicidality, dysphoria, ill temper, traumatic intrusions) and Fear-Avoidance (claustrophobia, social avoidance, panic symptoms, dietary restricting, excessive exercise, and compulsions). Results showed that the lowest level of the hierarchy predicted 67.7% of the variance in clinical impairment. In contrast,DSMeating, mood, and anxiety disorders combined predicted 10.6% of the variance in impairment secondary to an ED.

Conclusions

The current classification model represents an improvement over traditional nosologies for predicting clinically relevant outcomes for EDs.

Details

Title
Understanding eating disorders within internalizing psychopathology: A novel transdiagnostic, hierarchical-dimensional model
Author
Forbush, Kelsie T; Hagan, Kelsey E; Kite, Benjamin A; Danielle AN Chapa; Bohrer, Brittany K; Gould, Sara R
Pages
40-52
Publication year
2017
Publication date
Nov 1, 2017
Publisher
Elsevier Limited
ISSN
0010440X
e-ISSN
15328384
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1954384129
Copyright
Copyright Elsevier Limited Nov 1, 2017