Submitted:
03 May 2025
Posted:
08 May 2025
You are already at the latest version
Abstract
Keywords:
Clinical Implications:
- Service providers or relevant government departments could develop and maintain an online information hub, providing information, availability, and options for support.
- Health care practitioners should be supported to proactively explore the support needs of caregivers.
- There is an acute need for more, and more accessible, support to be available to caregivers.
- Service providers could further utilise the demonstrated benefits of lived experience in the support they offer.
Introduction
Method
Participants
Recruitment
Data Collected
Data Analysis
Statistical Analysis
Content Analysis
Results
Demographics
Support Accessed by Caregivers
- “Weekly meetings with psychologist and daughter; husband and immediate family helped with care; EDCS and other Facebook groups with other ED parents were useful for giving advice and sharing experience; EDANZ [Eating Disorder Association of New Zealand] useful helpline at the beginning before we were in the system.”
- “In the early years (ages 16 and 17) treatment was FBT based and so we were included with the counselling sessions. But as soon as my daughter became an "adult", i.e. overnight on her 18th birthday, we were excluded by the health practitioners and continue to be so. It is very very frustrating since I am at the coalface (so to speak) of dealing with the symptoms of the disease every single day, yet I feel unwelcome in any treatment assessment or planning.”
- “The support was always related to my daughter's treatment and I was related to as mum rather than as a person with distinct needs. It was helpful for education but not the emotional impact of what I went through as a caregiver.”
- “I felt like I was doing it on my own really never told what to do at home. I only felt supported once she went into [Regional Service] as an Inpatient.”
Reasons for Accessing Supports
- “All the support I got came through me seeking options and talking with a friend who also had a daughter with AN. None of the professionals we saw offered support or spoke about the toll being a caregiver would take.”
- “Many parents have had lived experience of the ‘system’ which was nice to find others who had been there and knew how tough it is dealing with the situation your loved one was in.”
Accessibility and Sufficiency of Caregiver Support
- “I have been told so many times that I need support and asked what support can we give you. But I don’t know what support there is. I haven't been provided with an assortment of options or services to select from, it's felt very much that's it's my job on top of everything else to go and arrange that for myself and find it.”
- “Once discharged from hospital no one could ever give us a definitive plan for how to help our daughter - felt very much like we had to figure out what worked on our own.”
- “Never received any ED outpatient treatment as they would not take her due to Autism (high functioning). Has been under MHA multiple times in psychiatric wards for severe suicidality and self-harm, and has had 3 inpatient stays in a ED ward, however they have now discharged, said she is severe, and is no longer allowed back. She is dying in front of my eyes.”
- “Treatment was declined for the eating disorder by the public system because she is also a diabetic but her self-harm made her too risky for any private clinic. The public system also won’t treat her because her weight is too high.”
Funding Support
- “I raised money by shaving my head.”
- “The ED has cost us our savings, home, career - but recovery is worth it.”
Support Improvements
Discussion
The Support Needs of Caregivers
Practical Recommendations
Develop and Maintain an Information Hub
Increase Support Availability for Caregivers
Increase Funding Availability for Caregivers
HCPs Proactively Assess Support Needs
Increase ED-Related Training for HCPs
Targeted ED-Specialised Support
Limitations
Future Research
Conclusion
Reflective Statement
Appendix A
| Sociodemographic factors | n (%) |
| Gender | |
| Female | 144 (94.12) |
| Male | 7 (4.58) |
| Transman | 1 (0.65) |
| Did not answer | 1 (0.65) |
| Relationship status | |
| Single | 12 (7.84) |
| Dating | 4 (2.61) |
| Has partner/Married | 124 (81.05) |
| Separated/Divorced/Widowed | 11 (7.18) |
| Did not answer | 2 (1.31) |
| Agea | |
| 18 - 39 | 16 (10.46) |
| 40 - 64 | 130 (84.97) |
| 65 ≤ | 6 (3.92) |
| Did not answer | 1 (0.65) |
| Ethnicity | |
| NZ European/European | 149 (97.39) |
| Māori | 10 (6.54) |
| Pacific Peoples | 2 (1.31) |
| Asian | 1 (0.65) |
| Other | 3 (1.96) |
| Education level | |
| High school (NCEA Level 1, 2, or 3) | 22 (14.38) |
| University certificate or diploma | 38 (24.84) |
| Bachelor’s degree | 43 (28.10) |
| Postgraduate | 43 (28.10) |
| Overseas secondary school qualification | 1 (0.65) |
| No qualification | 2 (1.31) |
| Did not answer | 4 (2.61) |
| Household income (NZD) | |
| ≤ $40,000 | 10 (6.54) |
| $40,000 – $59,999 | 10 (6.54) |
| $60,000 - $79,999 | 8 (5.23) |
| $80,000 - $99,999 | 9 (5.88) |
| $100,000 - $149,999 | 38 (24.84) |
| $150,000 - $199,999 | 17 (11.11) |
| $200,000 ≤ | 42 (27.45) |
| Preferred not to answer | 19 (12.42) |
| Employment Status | |
| Full-time | 56 (36.60) |
| Part-time | 54 (35.29) |
| Working multiple jobs | 5 (3.27) |
| Unemployed | 28 (18.30) |
| Studying | 5 (3.27) |
| Did not answer | 5 (3.27) |
| Number of children | |
| None | 11 (7.19) |
| One | 16 (10.46) |
| Two | 70 (45.75) |
| Three | 49 (32.03) |
| Over three | 7 (4.58) |
| Region | |
| Northland | 7 (4.58) |
| Auckland | 49 (32.03) |
| Waikato | 8 (5.23) |
| Bay of Plenty | 13 (8.50) |
| Hawkes Bay | 5 (3.27) |
| Taranaki | 4 (2.61) |
| Manawatū-Whanganui | 4 (2.61) |
| Wellington | 24 (15.69) |
| Tasman/Nelson/Marlborough | 6 (3.92) |
| West Coast/Southland | 2 (1.31) |
| Canterbury | 28 (18.30) |
| Otago | 3 (1.96) |
Appendix B
| Role Factors | n (%) |
| Relationship to person with the ED | |
| Parent | 112 (73.20) |
| Partner | 3 (1.96) |
| Sibling | 3 (1.96) |
| Friend | 1 (0.65) |
| Other whānau member | 6 (3.92) |
| Other | 2 (1.31) |
| Did not answer | 26 (16.99) |
| Recency of caregiving | |
| Currently a caregiver | 92 (60.13) |
| < 2 years ago | 29 (18.95) |
| 3-5 years ago | 18 (11.76) |
| 6-10 years ago | 9 (5.88) |
| >10 years ago | 3 (1.96) |
| Did not answer | 2 (1.31) |
| Hours per week of caregiving | |
| < 20 hours | 6 (3.92) |
| 20-40 hours | 3 (1.96) |
| Over 40 hours/lives with person with ED | 83 (54.25) |
| Did not answer | 61 (39.87) |
| Sharing of the caregiver role | |
| Regularly shared | 46 (30.07) |
| Occasionally shared | 28 (18.30) |
| Not shared | 21 (13.73) |
| Did not answer | 58 (37.91) |
Appendix C
| Sociodemographic Factors | M (SD) | |
| Current Age | 19.1 (6.1) | |
| Age at Onset | 13.9 (2.8) | |
| n (%) | ||
| Gendera | ||
| Woman | 114 (89.06) | |
| Man | 11 (8.59) | |
| Non-binary | 3 (2.34) | |
| Co-occurring Mental Health Disorders | ||
| Anxiety disorder | 87 (56.86) | |
| Depressive disorder | 46 (30.07) | |
| Autism spectrum disorder | 31 (20.26) | |
| Post-traumatic stress disorder | 23 (15.03) | |
| Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder | 21 (13.73) | |
| Obsessive-compulsive disorder | 11 (7.19) | |
| Other | 24 (15.69) | |
| Timing of Development of Co-occurring Mental Health Disorder | ||
| Prior to developing ED | 55 (35.95) | |
| After developing ED | 23 (15.03) | |
| During | 22 (14.38) | |
| Unsure | 5 (3.27) | |
| Did not answer | 48 (31.37) | |
| Eating disorder presentation | n (%) | |
| Diagnosed | Suspected | |
| Anorexia nervosa | 102 (66.67) | 6 (3.92) |
| Bulimia nervosa | 17 (11.11) | 5 (3.27) |
| Avoidant/restrictive food intake disorder | 15 (9.80) | 11 (7.19) |
| Binge-eating disorder | 7 (4.58) | 5 (3.27) |
| Orthorexia | 1 (0.65) | 6 (3.92) |
| Rumination disorder | 3 (1.96) | 0 (0.00) |
| Other specified feeding or eating disorder | 3 (1.96) | 1 (0.65) |
| Unspecified feeding or eating disorder | 2 (1.31) | 3 (1.96) |
| Other | 4 (2.61) | 0 (0.00) |
Appendix D
| Inaccessible Supports | Nr | % |
| Inaccessible Supportsa | ||
| Eating disorder-specialised support | 20 | 35.09 |
| Functional support | 8 | 14.04 |
| Financial support | 6 | 10.53 |
| Psychologists | 6 | 10.53 |
| Support groups | 6 | 10.53 |
| Therapy (unspecified) | 6 | 10.53 |
| Counselling | 5 | 8.77 |
| Reasons Support Soughtb | ||
| General need for support | 10 | 41.67 |
| Need for caregiver mental health support | 7 | 29.17 |
| Caregiver unable to work without the additional support | 4 | 16.67 |
| Prior supports accessed were unhelpful | 3 | 12.50 |
| Main Barriersc | ||
| Finances | 22 | 35.48 |
| Lack of availability | 22 | 35.48 |
| Individual with the ED being ineligible for support | 6 | 9.68 |
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| Treatment Received | nr (%) |
| Public system in NZ | |
| Outpatient | 66 (51.97) |
| Inpatient | 62 (48.82) |
| Day-patient | 16 (12.60) |
| Waitlist | 9 (7.09) |
| Private treatment provider in NZ | |
| Outpatient/individual therapy | 53 (41.73) |
| Inpatient | 5 (3.94) |
| Day-patient | 5 (3.94) |
| Waitlist | 6 (4.72) |
| Overseas | 10 (7.87) |
| Did not receive treatment | 13 (10.24) |
| Declined | 11 (8.66) |
| Other | 21 (16.54) |
| Support Type | nr (%) | |
| Generalista | Eating Disorder-Specialisedb | |
| Support groups | 83 (72.80) | 68 (66.67) |
| Mental health therapist | 81 (71.05) | 37 (26.27) |
| Self-help materials | 73 (64.04) | 52 (50.98) |
| General practitioner (GP) | 47 (41.23) | 7 (6.86) |
| Police | 19 (16.67) | 0 (0.00) |
| Other | 19 (16.67) | 17 (16.67) |
| Workshops | 18 (15.79) | 15 (14.71) |
| Other therapy | 8 (7.02) | 1 (0.98) |
| Caregiver Findings | nr | % |
| Most Common Supports Soughta | ||
| Emotional or psychological support | 42 | 44.21 |
| Eating disorder-specific knowledge | 31 | 32.63 |
| Support for the individual with the ED | 9 | 9.47 |
| Medication | 9 | 9.47 |
| Most Common Supports Received by Caregiversb | ||
| Informational | 260 | 32.10 |
| Emotional or psychological | 199 | 24.57 |
| Peer support | 95 | 11.73 |
| Greatest Support Benefitsc | ||
| Receiving emotional or psychological support | 216 | 48.32 |
| Gaining eating disorder-specific knowledge | 126 | 28.19 |
| Building eating disorder management skills | 62 | 13.87 |
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