Author:
Beumont P. J. V.,Kopec-Schrader E.,Touyz S. W.
Abstract
BackgroundIt is important to determine the optimal manner of categorising eating disorder patients so as to aid in the understanding of their specific psychopathological state.MethodWe compared subgroups of eating disorder patients divided according to different sets of factors, using a structured interview which elicits the specific psychopathological features of these illnesses. The patients, comprising 116 consecutive women admitted to two university-affiliated eating disorder clinics, were grouped according to DSM–III–R criteria, clinical presentation (purging, binge eating), nutritional status, and age.ResultThe clearest separation of groups was afforded by the clinical dimension of purging as opposed to not purging. This was superior to DSM–III–R criteria. Other systems, such as presence of binge eating, and various levels of nutritional status and of age, were clearly inferior.ConclusionThe presence or absence of purging behaviour appears to offer the most heuristic means of categorising eating disorder patients with respect to their specific psychopathological state.
Publisher
Royal College of Psychiatrists
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health
Cited by
35 articles.
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