J M Mond1, P J Hay, B Rodgers, C Owen. 1. School of Sociology, Australian National University, Canberra, Australia. Jonathan.Mond@anu.edu.au
Abstract
BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Impairment in mental health associated with eating-disorder features was examined in a large, general population sample of women aged 18 to 42 years. METHOD: Participants (n = 5255) completed self-report measures of eating-disordered behaviour, mental health functioning, height and weight and socio-demographic information. RESULTS: The most common eating-disorder features were extreme concerns about weight or shape (14.6%), subjective overeating (12.7%), objective overeating (10.6%) and extreme concerns about dietary intake (10.4%). In multivariable analysis, in which mental health functioning was regressed on eating-disorder features, while also controlling for age and body weight, objective overeating (β = -0.07), subjective overeating (β = -0.07), extreme dietary restriction (β = -0.06) and extreme concerns about eating (β = -0.04) showed small, but statistically significant associations with mental health impairment, whereas extreme weight or shape concerns showed a very strong association (β = -0.24). CONCLUSIONS: From a clinical perspective, the findings are consistent with the importance attached to the "over-evaluation" of weight or shape as a core component of eating-disorder psychopathology. From a public health perspective, the findings indicate the need to conceive of body dissatisfaction as a target for health promotion in its own right.
BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Impairment in mental health associated with eating-disorder features was examined in a large, general population sample of women aged 18 to 42 years. METHOD:Participants (n = 5255) completed self-report measures of eating-disordered behaviour, mental health functioning, height and weight and socio-demographic information. RESULTS: The most common eating-disorder features were extreme concerns about weight or shape (14.6%), subjective overeating (12.7%), objective overeating (10.6%) and extreme concerns about dietary intake (10.4%). In multivariable analysis, in which mental health functioning was regressed on eating-disorder features, while also controlling for age and body weight, objective overeating (β = -0.07), subjective overeating (β = -0.07), extreme dietary restriction (β = -0.06) and extreme concerns about eating (β = -0.04) showed small, but statistically significant associations with mental health impairment, whereas extreme weight or shape concerns showed a very strong association (β = -0.24). CONCLUSIONS: From a clinical perspective, the findings are consistent with the importance attached to the "over-evaluation" of weight or shape as a core component of eating-disorder psychopathology. From a public health perspective, the findings indicate the need to conceive of body dissatisfaction as a target for health promotion in its own right.
Authors: Lindsay P Bodell; Jennifer E Wildes; Yu Cheng; Andrea B Goldschmidt; Kate Keenan; Alison E Hipwell; Stephanie D Stepp Journal: J Abnorm Child Psychol Date: 2018-04
Authors: Allison F Wagner; Emily C Stefano; David C Cicero; Janet D Latner; Jonathan M Mond Journal: Qual Life Res Date: 2016-04-05 Impact factor: 4.147