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Life Events in the Etiopathogenesis and Maintenance of Restrictive Eating Disorders in Adolescence.

Giorgia BaradelDiletta Cristina PratileMarika OrlandiArianna VecchioErica CasiniValentina De GiorgisRenato BorgattiMartina Maria Mensinull The Mondino Foundation Eating Disorders Clinical Research Group
Published in: Children (Basel, Switzerland) (2023)
Life events (traumatic and protective) may be critical factors associated with eating disorders and their severity. To date, there is little literature concerning the role of life events in adolescence. The main goal of this study was to explore in a sample of adolescent patients with restrictive eating disorders (REDs) the presence of life events in the year before enrolment and to characterize them according to timing. Furthermore, we investigated correlations between REDs severity and the presence of life events. In total, 33 adolescents completed the EDI-3 questionnaire to assess RED severity using EDRC (Eating Disorder Risk Composite), GPMC (General Psychological Maladjustment Composite), and the Coddington Life Events Scales-Adolescent (CLES-A) questionnaires to define the presence of life events in the last year. Of these, 87.88% reported a life event in the past year. A significant association emerged between elevated clinical GPMC and the presence of traumatic events: patients who had experienced at least one traumatic life event in the year before enrolment presented higher clinically elevated GPMC compared to patients who had not. These results suggest that obtaining early information about traumatic events in clinical practice may help prevent the occurrence of new events and improve patient outcomes.
Keyphrases
  • spinal cord injury
  • young adults
  • clinical practice
  • systematic review
  • depressive symptoms
  • risk assessment
  • healthcare
  • mass spectrometry
  • social media
  • patient reported
  • single molecule