Research Review: What we have learned about the causes of eating disorders – a synthesis of sociocultural, psychological, and biological research
University of Nevada, Las Vegas · Ohio University · +1 more institution
Abstract
Eating disorders are severe psychiatric disorders with a complex etiology involving transactions among sociocultural, psychological, and biological influences. Most research and reviews, however, focus on only one level of analysis. To address this gap, we provide a qualitative review and summary using an integrative biopsychosocial approach.
We selected variables for which there were available data using integrative methodologies (e.g., twin studies, gene-environment interactions) and/or data at the biological and behavioral level (e.g., neuroimaging). Factors that met these inclusion criteria were idealization of thinness, negative emotionality, perfectionism, negative urgency, inhibitory control, cognitive inflexibility, serotonin, dopamine, ovarian hormones. Literature searches were conducted using PubMed. Variables were classified as risk factors or correlates of eating disorder diagnoses and disordered eating symptoms using Kraemer et al.'s (1997) criteria.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 45.25
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 168
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Psychology
- Biopsychosocial model
- Perfectionism (psychology)
- Eating disorders
- Disordered eating
- Clinical psychology
- Developmental psychology
- Psychiatry
- Reduced inequalities