| Literature DB >> 21889429 |
Martine F Flament1, Erin M Hill, Annick Buchholz, Katherine Henderson, Giorgio A Tasca, Gary Goldfield.
Abstract
This study investigates body esteem factors (weight-esteem and appearance-esteem) as mediators of the relationship between 'internalization of the ideal body figure' and disordered eating behaviors (restrained, emotional and external eating) in a community sample of adolescent males (n=810) and females (n=1137) from the Ontario Research on Eating and Adolescent Lifestyles (REAL) study. Mediation models were examined using a bootstrapping approach to test indirect effects and indirect contrasts. In males, weight-esteem partially mediated the relationship between muscular ideal and restrained eating; appearance-esteem partially mediated effects in the emotional and external eating regressions. In females, both weight-esteem and appearance-esteem partially mediated the relationship between thin ideal and all three forms of disordered eating; weight-esteem was a stronger mediator for restrained eating, and appearance-esteem a stronger mediator for emotional and external eating. Body esteem is important to consider for prevention and treatment of disordered eating in both genders.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21889429 DOI: 10.1016/j.bodyim.2011.07.007
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Body Image ISSN: 1740-1445