Risk factors of disordered eating in fat teens identified
July 31st, 2009 - 11:42 am ICT by ANIWashington, July 31 (ANI): A team of researchers has identified factors that may increase overweight adolescents’ risk of engaging in extreme weight control behaviors such as self-induced vomiting, the use of diet pills, laxatives, and diuretics, as well as binge eating.
Overweight youth with certain socio-environmental, psychological, and behavioral tendencies, such as reading magazine articles about dieting, reporting a lack of family connectedness, placing a high importance on weight, and reporting having participated in unhealthy weight control behaviors, are more likely to suffer from eating disorders.
Now, Dianne Neumark-Sztainer, Ph.D., M.P.H., R.D., School of Public Health, and colleagues used data from Project EAT, an ongoing study that assessed eating and weight-related behaviors in 4,746 adolescents from 31 urban Minneapolis-St. Paul schools during the 1998-99 academic year.
Youth were surveyed at two time points; the first occurring when participants were in middle school and high school, and the second occurring five years later.
From analyses, researchers found that disordered eating habits among overweight youth are linked to specific tendencies for both males and females, but a number of specific differences between genders were noticed.
For instance, increased hours of moderate to extreme physical activity and lower self-esteem predicted higher risk for disordered eating among females. For males, depressive symptoms, poor eating patterns, including high fast food and sweetened beverage intake, increased their risk of disordered eating.
“Further exploration of these gender differences may be important in understanding who is at highest risk for developing disordered eating behaviors and whether different intervention strategies may be needed to prevent disordered eating among males and females,” said Nancy Sherwood, Ph.D., assistant professor at the University of Minnesota School of Public Health and a co-author of the study. (ANI)
- Disordered eating behaviours continue into adulthood - Jun 27, 2011
- Tackling obesity in young people - Oct 21, 2010
- Nearly 25pc of overweight women think they're normal size: Study - Nov 23, 2010
- Regular family meals improve teens eating habits - Mar 09, 2009
- Young in India dieting, fasting to look good: Study - Apr 29, 2011
- Obesity depends on your society - Jul 12, 2011
- False body-image may cause unsafe weight-loss behaviour - Jun 18, 2010
- Successful weight control strategies for teens identified - Dec 02, 2009
- Starting school earlier lowers obesity risk: Study - Dec 15, 2010
- Vegetarians 'at higher risk of eating disorders' - Apr 01, 2009
- Body-image distortion leads to unsafe weight loss behaviours - Jun 18, 2010
- Parents can help overweight kid with body image - Apr 26, 2010
- Teens'' pals can affect their weight - Sep 14, 2008
- Weight-related bullying could change how schoolgoers perceive their bodies - Sep 08, 2010
- Inadequate sleep can make you fat - May 04, 2010
Tags: behavioral tendencies, beverage intake, control behaviors, d school, depressive symptoms, diet pills, disordered eating, diuretics, extreme weight, gender differences, intervention strategies, laxatives, males and females, minneapolis st paul, minnesota school, reading magazine, school of public health, st paul schools, time points, university of minnesota school of public health