Many Overweight Teens Have Same Eating Disorders As Thin Peers
Main Category: Eating DisordersAlso Included In: Obesity / Weight Loss / Fitness; Psychology / Psychiatry; Public Health
Article Date: 03 Oct 2007 - 0:00 PDT
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A new study of teenagers has found that the same risk factors are associated with both being overweight and with disordered eating behaviors like binge eating and using diet pills. Moreover, food related problems are extraordinarily common among urban teens affecting 44 percent of adolescent girls and 29 percent of boys.
The study also suggests that teasing teens about weight is no joke, especially when the teasing comes from family.
More than one third of the overweight girls in the study engaged in what the researchers called "extreme weight control behaviors," like vomiting or taking diet pills or laxatives in an attempt to lose weight. "We usually look for these behaviors in very thin girls, but here we see a very high prevalence in overweight girls," said lead author Dianne Neumark-Sztainer, Ph.D., professor of public health at the University of Minnesota.
The researchers looked at 2,516 adolescents, primarily from inner city schools, first in 1998 or 1999, and again five years later. They asked teens about their dietary practices, exercise, exposure to weight-related media messages (such as diet advice), family meals and about whether peers or family members had teased them about their weight. About one-quarter of the teens were overweight.
The study appears in the November issue of the American Journal of Preventive Medicine.
"It is common lore that eating disorders and obesity are separate problems and that intervening with obesity intensifies concerns about weight and makes eating disorders worse," said Kelly Brownell, Ph.D., director of the Rudd Center for Food Policy and Obesity at Yale University. "This study shows that some common factors may create vulnerability to or protection against both problems," said Brownell, who was not associated with this research.
A history of teasing about being fat was one of the strongest predictors of risk for being overweight and extreme dieting and taunts from family seemed to be worse than teasing by peers. When family members teased teens about weight, it doubled their risk of being overweight at the second survey. Although this kind of study cannot prove that the link is causal, it suggests that even light-hearted joking about weight at home could be problematic.
Eating together as a family and a sense of connection to family were protective, however. "Most families where there is weight-teasing are not abusive. They just don't realize how hurtful it is," said Neumark-Sztainer, who has written a book for parents to help with weight-related problems. "These findings show that your home needs to be a safe haven."
She added, "We have seen over the years that it does not work to make people feel worse about their bodies. The data are striking talking about weight, worrying too much about diet, focusing on it increases risk not only of eating disorders, but also of being overweight." Instead, she suggests modeling and positive encouragement of healthy behavior like making better food choices and exercising and unconditional love, regardless of weight.
Neumark-Sztainer D, et al. Shared risk and protective factors for overweight and disordered eating in adolescents. Am J Prev Med 33(5), 2007.
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Disturbing Criticism At Home
posted by c.forbes on 6 Oct 2007 at 12:27 pmAs a small girl I observed my father regularly joke about my extremely mildly overweight sister who had a 'broad behind' as he put it. This was part of the reason why my sister began to hate him profoundly and often expressed that hatred to me. She was 2 years older than myself and later she also convinced me that I was overweight, while I was matchstick thin, at between 8 - 11 years old.
She physically and mentally bullied me for many years, while acting out all the emotional abuse we experienced from our parents. Obviously she transferred all the 'teasing' my father gave her straight to me. I was more concerned by the other kinds of torture she inflicted on me and she never really convinced me I was fat - it was more confusing than anything else.
I quietly persisted in telling her, out of my continuing adoration for her, and a fervent desire that she would love me too, that she was not fat, whenever she (repeatedly) announced she was. This tactic never worked as my father had thoroughly induced her pain and she was not interesting in loving her scapegoat either way. She often made great use of a 4-letter word whenever I told her I loved her.
Family meals were an unhappy stress-filled encounter which I later assiduously avoided, by simply convincing my mother I didn't need to eat dinner at all. I disappeared henceforth, from around 15 to 17 years of age, preferring my bedroom and a few large-sized blocks of chocolate to console myself. Mother failed to notice the length of time that I had no appetite for dinner or express any concern. My father was never expressed an opinion - he didn't notice as he too avoided dinner.
We both progressed to having eating disorders and started dieting early in our teens.. When we were young adults she turned to cocaine to become thin and I turned into a health fanatic who brainwashed myself into the idea that fasting was a great idea.
I once existed briefly on a tiny container of yogurt, 1 apple and a tiny sparrow- sized dinner of salad and tuna per day. Fortunately I did not progress into anorexia at all and simply grew out of it. Ironically, the very first time I was surrounded by a loving family (my boyfriend's) I began to eat instantly and, without any hesitation or thought, gained weight.
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