An Integrated Model of Diet 281
- Not eating and thinness can be used to express problems within the
family. - The symptoms of eating disorders can function to keep the family together
and avoid family conflict.
Cognitions
An individual’s thoughts, beliefs, and attitudes are described throughout
the literature on eating behavior.
- From a social-cognition perspective, an individual’s beliefs about food
contribute towards their intentions to eat a particular diet, which in turn
affects their eating behavior. - Individuals hold a range of beliefs about the meaning of food.
- Individuals also hold a range of beliefs about the meaning of body size
and shape. - People believe that body shape can be changed and that dieting can bring
about weight loss. - Beliefs that dieting is an “all-or-nothing” phenomenon may contribute
towards overeating. - Overeating may be triggered by shifts in a cognitive set, with eating being
either a passive behavior or an active rebellion against food deprivation. - Many people show negative stereotypes of the obese and the overweight.
- People hold beliefs about obesity. Such beliefs may contribute towards
the success of obesity treatment. - Obesity treatment focuses on changing beliefs about food as a means
to change behavior. In particular it uses cognitive restructuring. - Distorted cognitions about weight, shape, and food may contribute to
the cause and perpetuation of disordered eating. - Treatment for eating disorders challenges distorted cognitions using
Socratic questions.
Conflict
Eating behavior relates to many different conflicts. These conflicts both
contribute to and result from eating-related problems.
- Food sets up a conflict between the pleasure of eating and the subsequent
guilt.