Abstract

Objective: The siblings of patients suffering from Anorexia Nervosa (AN) are potentially affected by a disturbed emotional experience that often remains undetected. In order to bring them a psychological support, the Maison de Solenn proposed a support group program for these siblings. The current research explores their mental representations of AN and their emotional experience in the support group named “sibling group.”Method: This exploratory study is based on a phenomenological and inductive qualitative method. Four girls and three boys aged between 6 and 19 participating in the “sibling group” were included in a one-time focus group session using a semi-structured interview guide. The thematic data analysis was performed by applying the methods of interpretative phenomenological analysis.Results: Themes that emerged from the interview fall into four categories: AN explained by siblings; the individual emotional experience of siblings; the family experience of siblings and the experience inside the “sibling group.”Discussion: According to our participants, the “sibling group” thus functions as a good compromise between keeping an active role in the anorexic patient's care and taking a step back to avoid being eaten up by the illness. Sibling-group participants retrieved a sense of belonging, which is normally one of the functions of being a sibling. It is important to note that the “sibling group” is part of the comprehensive (or global) family-based approach included in an institutional multidisciplinary integrative care framework.

Highlights

  • Anorexia Nervosa (AN) is a psychiatric pathology characterised by food restriction behaviours, leading to insufficient body weight, intense fear of getting fat, and changes in the perception of body image

  • Numerous reports and a wide body of research have shown that chronic pathologies have deleterious repercussions on family functioning and on each one of its members, including siblings, who are constantly concerned by the upheavals linked to the occurrence of a chronic illness [8,9,10,11,12,13,14]

  • Concerning the qualitative methodologies, we have chosen to refer to a method of discourse analysis: the Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis (IPA) technique, which will be presented in more detail below

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Summary

Introduction

Anorexia Nervosa (AN) is a psychiatric pathology characterised by food restriction behaviours, leading to insufficient body weight, intense fear of getting fat, and changes in the perception of body image. In the case of AN, professionals have in the last few years developed family-centred approaches, providing care to anorexic children or teenagers alongside support for the parents, but neglecting care toward the brothers and sisters, whose emotional experiences have long been ignored [15,16,17,18] This exclusion is reflected in the medical and psychological literature, where there is very little information or research devoted to the impact of AN on patients’ siblings [19,20,21,22,23,24,25]

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