Abstract

The latest studies and practice guidelines for the treatment of adolescent patients with anorexia nervosa agree in pointing out the key role played by parents in determining the young patients’ therapeutic possibilities and outcomes. Still family functioning has usually been studied using only self-reported instruments. The aim of the present study is therefore to investigate the triadic interactions within the families of adolescents with anorexia nervosa using a semi-standardized observational tool based on a recorded play session, the Lausanne Trilogue Play (LTP). Parents and adolescent daughters, consecutively referred to adolescent neuropsychiatric services, participated in the study and underwent the observational procedure (LTP). The 20 families of adolescent girls with anorexia nervosa (restricting type) were compared with 20 families of patients with internalizing disorders (anxiety and depression). The results showed different interactive patterns in the families of adolescents with anorexia nervosa: they had greater difficulties in respecting roles during the play, maintaining the joint attention and in sharing positive affect, especially in the three-together phase (third phase). The majority of these families (12) exhibited collusive alliances. The parental subsystem appeared frequently unable to maintain a structuring role, i.e., providing help, support and guidance to the daughters, while the girls in turn often found it hard to show independent ideas and develop personal projects. Parents experienced difficulty in carving out a couple-specific relational space, from which the ill daughter was at least temporarily excluded also when they were asked to continue to interact with each other, letting the daughter be simply present in a third-part position (fourth phase). The study of the triadic interactions in the families of adolescents with anorexia nervosa may help to shift the attention from the exclusive mother–daughter relation to the involvement of the father, and of the parental couple as a whole. The family functioning is in fact well established as a maintaining factor of anorexia nervosa or vice versa as a facilitating factor in the therapeutic process.

Highlights

  • Adolescent Anorexia Nervosa and Family RelationsAnorexia nervosa is the most studied and best-known eating disorder; it usually develops during adolescence

  • The aim of the present study is to investigate the triadic interactions within the families of adolescents with anorexia nervosa, using the Lausanne Trilogue Play (LTP) (Fivaz-Depeursinge and CorbozWarnery, 1999)

  • Like in Phase 3, the control parents seem to be able to positively interact with each other, when the daughter is not involved in the conversation (Phase 4); their interactive dynamic is maintained at a functional level, whereas the interaction of the parents of the daughter with anorexia nervosa becomes dysfunctional

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Summary

Introduction

Anorexia nervosa is the most studied and best-known eating disorder; it usually develops during adolescence. The potential role of family factors has been increasingly recognized both in the complex pathogenic and maintenance mechanisms and in the effectiveness of the therapeutic strategies for patients with anorexia nervosa (Lyke and Matsen, 2013; Anastasiadou et al, 2014; Lock et al, 2015). Other psychological aspects of the patients with anorexia nervosa and of their parents were investigated, including the characteristics of the perception and imaginative elaboration of emotions and feelings (e.g., alexithymic traits) within a family, confronted by the life endangering illness of the daughter. Findings from recent studies (Balottin et al, 2014; Duclos et al, 2014) suggested that the adolescent with anorexia nervosa and her parents might present specific emotional difficulties within the familial relations

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