Eating, the Self, and Interpersonal Relations ::Using a Modified Grounded Theory Approach to Analyze the Self-Narratives of Patients With Bulimia Nervosa
スポンサーリンク
概要
- 論文の詳細を見る
The suggestion that patients with eating disorders have low self-esteem has resulted in quantitative research on the self-concept of such individuals. However, in order to have an in-depth understanding of the behavior of these patients, their self-narratives should be analyzed. In the present research, Japanese adult women outpatients (7 diagnosed as having bulimia, and 1 with a "not-otherwise-specified" diagnosis) recounted their life stories, focusing on how they perceived themselves. When a modified grounded theory approach was used to analyze the life-story narratives, 7 hypothetical ideas about the structure, formation, and meaning of relationships were revealed, and a hypothetical model was generated. The model has 3 aspects : eating, self, and interpersonal relationships, with consequences that negatively influence patients' self-esteem. The self-narratives in each of these areas have complicated associations, which may keep the patients' self-esteem low.
著者
関連論文
- P1-27 過去20年間の海外における状態自尊感情研究の展望(3) : キーコンセプトに基づいた分類操作(ポスター発表)
- P1-26 過去20年間の海外における状態自尊感情研究の展望(2) : 対応分析を用いた詳細検討(ポスター発表)
- P1-25 過去20年間の海外における状態自尊感情研究の展望(1) : 研究動向の概括的検討(ポスター発表)
- P1-30 研究アプローチに基づいた状態・特性自尊感情概念の再考(3) : ボトムアップモデルの検討(ポスター発表(1))
- P1-29 研究アプローチに基づいた状態・特性自尊感情概念の再考(2) : トップダウンモデルの検討(ポスター発表(1))
- P1-28 研究アプローチに基づいた状態・特性自尊感情概念の再考(1) : 研究論文の分類操作(ポスター発表(1))
- (17)状態自己愛尺度作成の試み(研究発表C)
- Eating, the Self, and Interpersonal Relations ::Using a Modified Grounded Theory Approach to Analyze the Self-Narratives of Patients With Bulimia Nervosa