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Page 1: Stigmatization of anorexia nervosa and muscle dysmorphia

STIGMATISATION OF ANOREXIA NERVOSA AND MUSCLE DYSMORPHIAGriffiths, S., Mond, J. M., Murray, S. B., & Touyz, S. (In-press).

Young peoples’ stigmatizing attitudes and beliefs about anorexia and muscle dysmorphia. International Journal of Eating Disorders. doi:10.1002/eat.2222

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Sex differences in eating disorder prevalence

Anorexia Nervosa

Bulimia Nervosa

Binge Eating Disorder

EDNOS Muscle Dysmorphia

0%

50%

100%

25% 30%

50%40%

90%

75% 70%

50%60%

10%

(Hoek & Hueken, 2003; Hudson et al. 2007; Madden et al. 2009; Muise et al. 2003)

Men Women

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Two ends of a spectrum?

Anorexia nervosa Muscle dysmorphia

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Stigma and eating disorders

› Eating disorders are stigmatised

› People with anorexia = attention seekers who are personally responsible for their illness (Crisafulli; Holle, & Bulik, 2008; Crisp, Gelder, Rix, Meltzer, & Rowlands, 2000; Mond, Robertson-Smith, & Vetere, 2006; Roehrig & McLean, 2010)

› Stigma is assumed to be the reason why so few males are in treatment

› Eating disorders are a “girl's problem" (Robinson et al. 2012)

› However, studies examining stigma toward male and female eating disorder sufferers have found few (if any) differences (Wingfield, Kelly, Serdar, Shivy, & Mazzeo, 2011)

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Masculinity, stigma and eating disorders

› Adherence to masculine norms is consistently negatively associated with men’s willingness to seek professional help (Addis & Mahalik, 2003; Courtenay, 2000; Levant & Richmond, 2007; Manfield, Addis & Mahalik, 2003; O’Neil, 2008)

› Especially resistant to taking medication (Berger et al. 2013)

› Men prefer talk-therapy with a psychotherapist over other forms of professional help-seeking (Berger et al. 2013)

› Men react more positively to seeking professional treatment at the suggestion of a psychotherapist compared with a medical doctor or romantic partner (Berger et al. 2013)

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Anorexia Nervosa

Muscle DysmorphiaAnorexia Nervosa

Muscle Dysmorphia

Exploring stigma toward anorexia and muscle dysmorphia

N = 343

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Large Medium Small The character is… Small Medium Large

X Weird

X Narcissistic

X An attention-seeker

X Less likely to be talked to about their problem by

the participant

X Less likely to be watched or monitored by the

participant

X Less likely to be watched or monitored by others

Higher for male participants Higher for female participants

Main effects of participant sex (male or female)

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Large Medium Small The character is… Small Medium Large

X Masculine

Feminine X

More likely to be watched/monitored

X

More uncomfortable to talk to

X

More psychologically fragile

X

Less likely to recover easily

X

X Less likely to be discriminated against

Higher for male characters Higher for female characters

Main effects of character sex (male or female)

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Large Medium Small The character is… Small Medium Large

X Unintelligent

X Less competent than their peers

X Self-destructive

X Will put strain on your friendship

X Likely to be watched or monitored by the participant

X Likely to be watched or monitored by others

Likely to recover easily X

X Likely to be talked to about their problem by the participant

X Going to require caution so as to not upset them

X Physically fragile

Higher for anorexia nervosa Higher for muscle dysmorphia

Main effects of character diagnosis (anorexia or muscle dysmorphia)

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Anorexia nervosa

Muscle dysmorphia

1

2

3

4

5 Male partic-ipantsn = 113

Female par-ticipantsn = 230

Character diagnosis

Me

an

pe

rce

ive

d m

asc

ulin

ity

› To what extent do you agree with the following statement: Kelly/Michael is masculine

- 5 = strongly agree

- 4 = agree

- 3 = neither agree nor disagree

- 2 = disagree

- 1 = strongly disagree

› Size of this effect size is very large (η2 = .23)

- Even stronger for male participants (interaction η2 = .03, p = .002)

Stigma and gender-role expectations

*p < .001

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1

2

3

4

5 Malesn = 26

Femalesn = 192

Me

an

fre

que

ncy

of s

tigm

atis

atio

n

› How often are you subjected to the attitude or belief that you are “less of a man/woman” because of your eating disorder?

- 5 = always

- 4 = often

- 3 = sometimes

- 2 = rarely

- 1 = never

› Size of this effect size is moderate (η2 = .07)

Gender-role stigmatisation in eating disorders

*p < .001

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Directions for future research

N = 173

› Is stigma associated with more negative attitudes about seeking psychological treatment in people with eating disorders?

- N = 173Aspect of eating disorder

stigmatisationNegative attitudes about seeking

psychological treatment

Alienation r = .40***Stereotype endorsement r = .30***Discrimination experience r = .25**Social withdrawal r = .36***Perceived devaluation & discrimination

r = .36***

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Conclusions

N = 173

› Anorexia nervosa is stigmatised more than muscle dysmorphia

› Undergraduate men in first-year psychology stigmatise people with these conditions more than undergraduate women

› In broad terms, male characters with anorexia or muscle dysmorphia are not stigmatised more than female characters

› However, characters with anorexia nervosa are perceived as much less masculine than people with muscle dysmorphia

- Even after accounting for the sex of the character

- Undergraduate men exhibit this stigma more than women

› Perception that people with anorexia nervosa are stigmatised as less masculine is supported by emerging results from men with anorexia nervosa


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