Abstract

Modern psychoanalytic developmental theory suggests that a child's inability to make sense of her own mind and those of others (i.e. mentalization) leaves her vulnerable to communicate through action instead of words, which can include somatization in the form of an eating disorder (ED). This pilot study tested the correlation between ED risk and insecure attachment among 76 preadolescent girls and compared the mentalization capacities of girls with high and low vulnerability to EDs. Girls in fourth through sixth grades were given tests measuring their ED risk and attachment styles. Thirty subjects with the highest and lowest scores on measures of ED were then administered a mentalization picture task to measure their capacity to mentalize. The analysis of the data indicated a significant negative correlation between ED risk and attachment style as well as ED risk and mentalization capacity, i.e. girls in the high-risk group for ED had significantly lower scores on attachment and mentalization. Implicatio...

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