Early maladaptive schemas mediate the relationship between severe childhood trauma and eating disorder symptoms: evidence from an exploratory study

J Eat Disord. 2024 Sep 11;12(1):138. doi: 10.1186/s40337-024-01103-y.

Abstract

Background: Childhood trauma history has frequently been linked to eating disorders (EDs); nevertheless, the scientific literature calls for extending knowledge regarding mediators between EDs and childhood trauma. This study explored whether ED symptoms and early maladaptive schemas were more severe in ED patients with severe childhood trauma than in ED patients with no/mild childhood trauma and whether early maladaptive schemas mediated the relationship between childhood trauma and ED symptom severity.

Methods: Data were extracted from the Regional Centre for Eating Disorders registry at the University Hospital of Verona. The extracted data included self-reported data, including the Eating Disorder Inventory-3 score, Young Schema Questionnaire score, Childhood Experience and Experience of Care and Abuse Questionnaire score, and sociodemographic and clinical information on the ED outpatients seeking care. A mediation analysis using the structural equation modeling procedure was conducted.

Results: Forty-two outpatients, 31% of whom exhibited severe childhood trauma, satisfied the criteria for registry data extraction. The severity of ED symptoms, as well as the early maladaptive schemas' scores for emotional deprivation, defectiveness, failure, vulnerability, insufficient self-control, and negativity, were greater in ED outpatients with severe childhood trauma. Furthermore, early maladaptive schemas related to defectiveness, failure, and negativity had a mediating role in the relationship between severe childhood trauma and ED symptom severity.

Conclusions: This exploratory study provides preliminary evidence about the importance of early maladaptive schemas in the relationship between trauma history and ED psychopathology. In addition, ED symptoms may represent a dysfunctional attempt to avoid unpleasant emotions associated with schema activation. The results support the need to consider early maladaptive schemas in the treatment of traumatized patients with ED symptoms. Study limitations, research and clinical implications are discussed.

Keywords: Childhood trauma; Early maladaptive schemas; Eating disorders; Outpatients; Psychopathology.

Plain language summary

Eating disorder psychopathology was found to be related to a history of trauma. Nonetheless, our understanding of the mediators of the relationship between childhood trauma and eating disorders remains to be improved. The current study revealed that certain early maladaptive schemas (i.e., defectiveness, failure, and negativity) mediated the relationship between childhood trauma and eating disorder symptoms and that outpatients who experienced severe childhood trauma reported more severe eating disorder symptoms and greater severity of certain early maladaptive schemas, such as emotional deprivation, defectiveness, failure, vulnerability, insufficient self-control, and negativity. Our findings support the need to consider early maladaptive schemas in the treatment of traumatized patients with eating disorders.