Abstract

BackgroundPatients with eating disorders have reported poorer emotional awareness, more emotional suppression, less use of adaptive emotional regulation strategies, and more use of maladaptive emotional regulation strategies compared to people in healthy control groups.AimTo explore experiences of emotions by a transdiagnostic sample of patients with eating disorders.MethodNine patients with different eating disorder diagnoses at an eating disorder outpatient clinic in Sweden were interviewed for their thoughts on emotions. The interviews were analyzed with Thematic Analysis.ResultFour themes were constructed: “Not knowing what one feels”, “Switch off, run away, or hide behind a mask”, “Emotions in a lifelong perspective”, and “Using eating behaviours to regulate emotions”. The patients described uncertainty regarding whether they experienced emotions correctly. They described how they tried to avoid difficult emotions through suppressive strategies and eating disorder behaviour. All described strategies were inefficient and all emotions were experienced as problematic, even joy. Since joy was used as a mask, the real experience of happiness was lost and mourned.ConclusionAll kinds of emotions were considered problematic to experience, but shame, fear, and sadness were considered worst. It is difficult to know if the emotional difficulties preceded an eating disorder, however such difficulties may have increased as a result of the eating disorder.

Highlights

  • Emotions work as guides for e.g. motivation, decisionmaking, goal setting, evaluation, action, learning enhancement, perspective evaluation, and as promotors of attachment [1]

  • It is difficult to know if the emotional difficulties preceded an eating disorder, such difficulties may have increased as a result of the eating disorder

  • Plain English summary Previous studies on patients with eating disorders have described problems with emotional management, for example: lower emotional awareness, greater emotional suppression, and difficulties in using adaptive emotional regulatory strategies compared to people without eating disorders

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Summary

Introduction

Emotions work as guides for e.g. motivation, decisionmaking, goal setting, evaluation, action, learning enhancement, perspective evaluation, and as promotors of attachment [1]. A greater degree of emotion dysregulation has been shown to correlate to more severe ED symptomatology [8]. Patients with ED have reported poorer emotional awareness, emotional suppression, less use of adaptive emotional regulation strategies, and greater use of maladaptive emotional regulation strategies compared to people in healthy control groups [6, 10,11,12,13,14,15]. Patients with eating disorders have reported poorer emotional awareness, more emotional suppression, less use of adaptive emotional regulation strategies, and more use of maladaptive emotional regulation strategies compared to people in healthy control groups

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