Diagnosing and managing anorexia nervosa in UK primary care: A focus group study

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Abstract

Background. Anorexia is a leading cause of adolescent hospital admission and death from psychiatric disorder. Despite the potential role of general practitioners in diagnosis, appropriate referral and coordinating treatment, few existing studies provide fine-grained accounts of GPs' beliefs about anorexia. Objectives. To identify GPs' understandings and experiences of diagnosing and managing patients with anorexia in primary care. Methods. Case-based focus groups with co-working general practitioners in the East Midlands region of England were used to explore attitudes towards issues common to patients with eating disorders. Group discussions were transcribed and analysed using corpus linguistic and discourse analytic approaches. Results. Participants' discussion focused on related issues of making hesitant diagnoses, the utility of the body mass index, making referrals and overcoming patient resistance. Therapeutic relationships with patients with anorexia are considered highly complex, with participants using diagnostic tests as rhetorical strategies to help manage communicative obstacles. Conclusions. Overcoming patient repudiation and securing referrals are particular challenges with this patient group. Successfully negotiating these problems appears to require advanced communication skills. © The Author 2013. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.

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Hunt, D., & Churchill, R. (2013). Diagnosing and managing anorexia nervosa in UK primary care: A focus group study. Family Practice, 30(4), 459–465. https://doi.org/10.1093/fampra/cmt013

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