Personal recovery of young adults with severe anorexia nervosa during adolescence: a case series

Eat Weight Disord. 2020 Aug;25(4):867-878. doi: 10.1007/s40519-019-00696-7. Epub 2019 May 16.

Abstract

Purpose: Despite the emergence of a growing qualitative literature about the personal recovery process in mental disorders, this topic remains little understood in anorexia nervosa (AN), especially severe AN during adolescence. This cases series is a first step that aims to understand recovery after severe AN among adolescents in France, from a first-person perspective.

Methods: This cases series applied the interpretative phenomenological analysis (IPA) method to data collected in semi-structured face-to-face interviews about the recovery process of five young women who had been hospitalized with severe AN 10 years earlier during adolescence.

Results: A model of recovery in four stages (corseted, vulnerable, plastic, and playful) crossing seven dimensions (struggle and path of initiation; work on oneself; self-determination and help; body; family; connectedness; and timeline) emerged from the analysis. New features of the AN personal recovery process were characterized: bodily well-being and pleasure of body; stigmatization; the role of the group; relation to time; and importance of narratives. We suggest a new shape to model the AN recovery process, one that suggests several tipping points. Recruitment must now be widened to different AN contexts.

Conclusions: The personal recovery paradigm may provide a new approach to care, complementary to medical paradigm.

Registration of clinical trial: No. NCT03712384. Our study was purely observational, without assignment of medical intervention. As a consequence, this clinical trial was registered retrospectively.

Level of evidence: Level V, descriptive study.

Keywords: Anorexia nervosa; Eating disorders; Personal narratives; Qualitative research; Recovery.

Publication types

  • Observational Study

MeSH terms

  • Adolescent
  • Anorexia Nervosa* / therapy
  • Female
  • France
  • Humans
  • Research
  • Retrospective Studies
  • Young Adult