Popis: |
Disordered eating symptoms (DES) are common among women veterans. While integrated primary care (IPC) may be an important venue to treat DES, little is known on patients' treatment preferences. The purpose of this study was to gather patient feedback on factors that may influence women veterans' DES and preferences for IPC services.We conducted semistructured interviews with purposefully sampled women who reported DES using the Eating Disorder Examination Questionnaire (EDE-Q). Twelve veterans (Results revealed longstanding DES of various types, including those consistent with restriction, binge eating, and bulimia. However, past experiences with symptom management primarily involved self-management vs. clinical management. Participants also endorsed multiple perceived treatment facilitators and barriers. Among facilitators were strong provider relationships, patient-centered communications, personalized goal setting, and skill-focused whole-person care. Barriers included feeling judged by others (including providers), amotivation, and financial and time limitations.While IPC may be an important venue to identify and treat DES, multiple factors are likely to influence patients' use of these services. Future work should explore the potential for multidisciplinary IPC teams to address DES. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved). |