Anorexia nervosa and social class.

OBJECTIVES (1) To examine social class status of female patients with anorexia nervosa presenting over a 33-year period; (2) to identify any differences in clinical features between the social classes. METHOD Retrospective survey using comprehensive clinical database of patients referred to a national specialist center for the assessment and treatment of anorexia nervosa. Social class was defined using UK Registrar General's classification of father's occupation. Statistical methods included initial univariate analyses and subsequent ordinal logistic regression. RESULTS (1) Social class distribution was consistently weighted toward social classes 1/2. (2) Possible clinical indicators examined included low body weight, binge eating, and consequent weight-regulatory behaviors such as vomiting and laxative and diuretic misuse. These clinical features and their distribution proved to be similar across the social groups. Clinically rated quality of family relationships and types of family constellations were also consistent across the social classes. (3) Dieting prodromata and onset of the disorder occurred at younger ages in social classes 1/2. (4) A modest shift in social class distribution over time was apparent, with slightly more patients presenting post-1985 likely to come from lower social classes. Claims that the social class distribution is a product of referral patterns and acceptances are disputed. CONCLUSION We suggest that the social class bias reflects a sociocultural influence; a product of the disorder significantly often arising as an avoidant response to the conflict between social class-related family values/attitudes and adolescent turbulence within that family.

[1]  A. Crisp,et al.  Primary Anorexia Nervosa or Weight Phobia in the Male: Report on 13 Cases , 1972, British medical journal.

[2]  G. Russell,et al.  Value of family background and clinical features as predictors of long-term outcome in anorexia nervosa: four-year follow-up study of 41 patients , 1975, Psychological Medicine.

[3]  C. Freeman,et al.  The dismantling of a myth: a review of eating disorders and socioeconomic status. , 1996, The International journal of eating disorders.

[4]  H. Morgan,et al.  Management and Outcome in Anorexia Nervosa , 1983, British Journal of Psychiatry.

[5]  S. Mcguigan,et al.  Anorexia nervosa: change over time in age of onset, presentation and duration of illness , 1994, Psychological Medicine.

[6]  P. Garfinkel,et al.  Anorexia Nervosa : A Multidimensional Perspective , 1982 .

[7]  H. Hoek,et al.  Review of the epidemiological studies of eating disorders. , 1993 .

[8]  A. Crisp Anorexia nervosa: Let me be , 1980 .

[9]  G. Giacometti,et al.  Update on the epidemiology of anorexia nervosa in a defined region of Switzerland. , 1990, The American journal of psychiatry.

[10]  G. Szmukler,et al.  Anorexia nervosa: a psychiatric case register study from Aberdeen , 1986, Psychological Medicine.

[11]  A H Crisp,et al.  Clinical features of anorexia nervosa. A study of a consecutive series of 102 female patients. , 1980, Journal of psychosomatic research.

[12]  A. Crisp,et al.  A study of 56 families with anorexia nervosa. , 1977, The British journal of medical psychology.

[13]  A. Holland,et al.  Nature and nurture in anorexia nervosa: A study of 34 pairs of twins, one pair of triplets, and an adoptive family , 1985 .

[14]  R E Kendell,et al.  The epidemiology of anorexia nervosa , 1973, Psychological Medicine.

[15]  Dc Washington Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, 4th Ed. , 1994 .

[16]  G. Patton,et al.  Abnormal eating attitudes in London schoolgirls — a prospective epidemiological study: outcome at twelve month follow-up , 1990, Psychological Medicine.