| Literature DB >> 26842985 |
Antonios Dakanalis1,2, Alix Timko3, Silvia Serino4, Giuseppe Riva5,4, Massimo Clerici2, Giuseppe Carrà6.
Abstract
The course of college women's eating pathology is variable. Little is known about psychosocial factors prospectively predicting maintenance/cessation or the new onset of clinically significant disordered eating symptoms. This study aimed to address these research gaps. College women (N = 2202) completed an assessment of eating pathology and potential risk/maintenance factors at two time points, 9 months apart. Logistic regression models indicated that elevated body dissatisfaction, thin-ideal internalization, self-objectification, negative affectivity and lower self-esteem at baseline predicted 'onset' of clinically significant disordered eating symptomatology at follow-up. Greater self-esteem and lower initial levels on the remaining risk factors predicted subsequent 'cessation' of clinically significant disordered eating symptoms. Self-objectification had greater explanatory value with regard to 'cessation' and 'onset' relative to the remaining traditionally accepted factors that demonstrated half as much predictive power or less. Practical implications are discussed.Entities:
Keywords: eating pathology; longitudinal study; maintenance/cessation; risk factors; women
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26842985 DOI: 10.1002/erv.2433
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Eat Disord Rev ISSN: 1072-4133