Login / Signup

COVID Isolation Eating Scale (CIES): Analysis of the impact of confinement in eating disorders and obesity-A collaborative international study.

Fernando Fernandez-ArandaLucero MunguíaGemma Mestre-BachTrevor StewardMikel EtxandiIsabel BaenasRosario GraneroIsabel SanchezEmilio OrtegaAlba AndreuVioleta L MoizeJosé Manuel Fernandez RealFrancisco José TinahonesCarlos DiegüezGema FrühbeckDaniel Le GrangePamela StavriAndreas F K KarwautzMichael ZeilerAngela FavaroLaurence ClaesKoen LuyckxIa ShekriladzeEduardo Serrano TroncosoTeresa RangilMaria Eulalia Loran MelerJose Soriano-PachecoMar Carceller-SindreuSara Bujalance-ArguijoMeritxell LozanoRaquel LinaresCarlota GudiolJordi CarratalaJessica Sanchez-GonzalezBárbara C MachadoAnders HåkanssonFerenc TúryBea PászthyDaniel SteinHana PapezováBrigita BaxMikhail F BorisenkovSergey V PopovYoul-Ri KimMichiko NakazatoNathalie T GodartRobert van VorenTetiana IlnytskaJue ChenKatie RowlandsJanet TreasureSusana Jiménez Murcia
Published in: European eating disorders review : the journal of the Eating Disorders Association (2020)
Confinement during the COVID-19 pandemic is expected to have a serious and complex impact on the mental health of patients with an eating disorder (ED) and of patients with obesity. The present manuscript has the following aims: (1) to analyse the psychometric properties of the COVID Isolation Eating Scale (CIES), (2) to explore changes that occurred due to confinement in eating symptomatology; and (3) to explore the general acceptation of the use of telemedicine during confinement. The sample comprised 121 participants (87 ED patients and 34 patients with obesity) recruited from six different centres. Confirmatory Factor Analyses (CFA) tested the rational-theoretical structure of the CIES. Adequate goodness-of-fit was obtained for the confirmatory factor analysis, and Cronbach alpha values ranged from good to excellent. Regarding the effects of confinement, positive and negative impacts of the confinement depends of the eating disorder subtype. Patients with anorexia nervosa (AN) and with obesity endorsed a positive response to treatment during confinement, no significant changes were found in bulimia nervosa (BN) patients, whereas Other Specified Feeding or Eating Disorder (OSFED) patients endorsed an increase in eating symptomatology and in psychopathology. Furthermore, AN patients expressed the greatest dissatisfaction and accommodation difficulty with remote therapy when compared with the previously provided face-to-face therapy. The present study provides empirical evidence on the psychometric robustness of the CIES tool and shows that a negative confinement impact was associated with ED subtype, whereas OSFED patients showed the highest impairment in eating symptomatology and in psychopathology.
Keyphrases