UNLABELLED: Previously, the researchers proposed and tested a diagnostic framework for women with eating-related concerns who seek college health and mental health treatment. The framework emphasized moderate problems characterized by frequent binging, occasional purging, and frequent exercise; rumination; body image and self-esteem concerns; ambivalence about help seeking; and developmental themes. Several questions remained about the framework's generalizability beyond women in treatment. OBJECTIVE: In the current study, the authors provide new support for the framework's generalizability to college women with clinically significant eating concerns who do not seek treatment. PARTICIPANTS AND METHODS: Female students (N = 112) completed a screening instrument providing descriptive and comparative data about primary symptoms, associated features, and help seeking. RESULTS: Results suggested that the framework is specific to women with eating problems and does not suffer the pitfalls of applying over-generally to all college women or all female patients and clients. CONCLUSIONS: Implications for practice, research limitations, and remaining questions are discussed.
UNLABELLED: Previously, the researchers proposed and tested a diagnostic framework for women with eating-related concerns who seek college health and mental health treatment. The framework emphasized moderate problems characterized by frequent binging, occasional purging, and frequent exercise; rumination; body image and self-esteem concerns; ambivalence about help seeking; and developmental themes. Several questions remained about the framework's generalizability beyond women in treatment. OBJECTIVE: In the current study, the authors provide new support for the framework's generalizability to college women with clinically significant eating concerns who do not seek treatment. PARTICIPANTS AND METHODS: Female students (N = 112) completed a screening instrument providing descriptive and comparative data about primary symptoms, associated features, and help seeking. RESULTS: Results suggested that the framework is specific to women with eating problems and does not suffer the pitfalls of applying over-generally to all college women or all female patients and clients. CONCLUSIONS: Implications for practice, research limitations, and remaining questions are discussed.
Authors: Denise E Wilfley; Ellen E Fitzsimmons-Craft; Dawn M Eichen; Dorothy J Van Buren; R Robinson Welch; Athena H Robinson; Booil Jo; Ramesh Raghavan; Enola K Proctor; G Terence Wilson; W Stewart Agras Journal: Contemp Clin Trials Date: 2018-07-06 Impact factor: 2.226