Further development of a scale of perceived expressed emotion and its evaluation in a sample of patients with eating disorders

Abstract High expressed emotion (EE) as measured by the Camberwell Family Interview (CFI) predicts the course of eating disorders (ED). Despite its important contribution to the field, the CFI has two major limitations; it is time-consuming and it does not consider the patient's perspective. Ob...

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Veröffentlicht in:Psychiatry research 2011-12, Vol.190 (2), p.291-296
Hauptverfasser: Medina-Pradas, Cristina, Navarro, J. Blas, López, Steven R, Grau, Antoni, Obiols, Jordi E
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container_end_page 296
container_issue 2
container_start_page 291
container_title Psychiatry research
container_volume 190
creator Medina-Pradas, Cristina
Navarro, J. Blas
López, Steven R
Grau, Antoni
Obiols, Jordi E
description Abstract High expressed emotion (EE) as measured by the Camberwell Family Interview (CFI) predicts the course of eating disorders (ED). Despite its important contribution to the field, the CFI has two major limitations; it is time-consuming and it does not consider the patient's perspective. Obtaining the patient's view may help shed light on the dyadic nature of caregiver's EE and the patient's illness course. The objectives of our study of 77 patients with ED were to develop further a brief measure to assess the patients' perceptions of their caregivers' EE, the patient version of the Brief Dyadic Scale of Expressed Emotion (BDSEE), and to evaluate its psychometric properties. Three clearly separate factors were identified: perceived criticism, perceived emotional overinvolvement, and perceived warmth. The BDSEE also demonstrated good levels of reliability and construct validity. The BDSEE subscales are significantly related to other measures of the perceived family emotional climate and to the CFI, the gold standard in the field of EE. The clinical implications of the ED patients' perceptions of their caregivers' EE are discussed. Findings support the utility of the expanded BDSEE for both research and clinical practise in assessing the perspective of patients with ED.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.psychres.2011.06.011
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subjects Adolescent
Adult
Biological and medical sciences
Caregivers - psychology
Criticism
Eating Disorder
Emotional overinvolvement
Expressed emotion
Expressed Emotion - physiology
Feeding and Eating Disorders - diagnosis
Feeding and Eating Disorders - psychology
Female
Humans
Male
Medical sciences
Middle Aged
Patient perspective
Principal Component Analysis
Psychiatry
Psychology. Psychoanalysis. Psychiatry
Psychometrics - methods
Psychometrics. Diagnostic aid systems
Psychopathology. Psychiatry
Reproducibility of Results
Statistics as Topic
Techniques and methods
Warmth
Young Adult
title Further development of a scale of perceived expressed emotion and its evaluation in a sample of patients with eating disorders
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