我要吃瓜

Article

The role of gendered constructions of eating disorders in delayed help-seeking in men: A qualitative interview study

Details

Citation

Raisanen U & Hunt K (2014) The role of gendered constructions of eating disorders in delayed help-seeking in men: A qualitative interview study. BMJ Open, 4 (4), Art. No.: 004342. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2013-004342

Abstract
Objectives: To understand how young men recognise eating disorder (ED) symptoms and decide to seek help, and to examine their experiences of initial contacts with primary care. Design: A qualitative interview study.  Setting: Men from across the UK were interviewed as part of a study of 39 young men's and women's experiences of having an ED.  Participants: 10 men aged 16-25 years with various EDs including anorexia nervosa and bulimia nervosa.  Results: The widespread perception of EDs as uniquely or predominantly a female problem led to an initial failure by young men to recognise their behaviours as symptoms of an ED. Many presented late in their illness trajectory when ED behaviours and symptoms were entrenched, and some felt that opportunities to recognise their illness had been missed because of others' lack of awareness of EDs in men. In addition, the men discussed the lack of gender-appropriate information and resources for men with EDs as an additional impediment to making sense of their experiences, and some felt that health and other professionals had been slow to recognise their symptoms because they were men.  Conclusions: Although increasingly common in young men, widespread cultural constructions of EDs as a 'women's illness ' mean that men may fail to recognise ED symptoms until disordered behaviours become entrenched and less tractable to intervention. Men also report that such perceptions can affect the reactions of their families and friends, as well as health and educational professionals. Primary care professionals are well placed to challenge inappropriate perceptions of EDs.

Journal
BMJ Open: Volume 4, Issue 4

StatusPublished
Publication date31/12/2014
Publication date online08/04/2014
Date accepted by journal13/02/2014
PublisherBMJ Journals
eISSN2044-6055

People (1)

Professor Kate Hunt

Professor Kate Hunt

Professor, Institute for Social Marketing