Open AccessJournal Article
Eating disorders associated risk factors: trends from 2007 to 2010.
Ivonne Margarita Chávez Hernández,Teresita de Jesús Saucedo-Molina,Amanda Peña Irecta,Claudia Unikel Santoncini +3 more
TL;DR: The risk analysis showed an increase in those with disordered eating, in thin-ideal internalization, advertising influence, and body shape distress, mainly in women.
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Abstract: The purpose of this study was to determine the trends on risk factors associated to eating disorders in bachelor students from an urban setting in Hidalgo in the period 2007-2010. Material and Methods: Students were censored both in 2007 and in 2010, and registered as 455 (50.5% female, 49.5% male) students in 2007 and 434 (49.8% female, 50.2% male) in 2010, aged 15-19 years in both cases. Three questionnaires were used to assess sociocultural factors, disordered eating behaviors, and body aesthetic thin-ideal internalization. Body dissatisfaction was measured with nine body figure analogic. To assess body mass index, each subject was weighed and height measured. Comparisons by year and gender were obtained. Results: Body shape distress increased from 20.8% in 2007 to 21.7% in 2010; disordered eating behaviors trends increased from 2007 to 2010 both in females and males, but were statistically significant only in males. The percentage of subjects with body dissatisfaction in the sense to be thinner was the same in both years (39.8%). The risk analysis showed an increase in those with disordered eating, in thin-ideal internalization, advertising influence, and body shape distress, mainly in women. Conclusions: These findings must be considered in the design of preventive programs and early case detection in adolescents from Hidalgo
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Citations
Drive for muscularity and disordered eating behaviors and its relationship with anthropometric indicators and physical activity in Mexican adolescent men.
Orquidea Galdina Arellano-Pérez,Michelle Jhovana Vázquez-Cervantes,Trinidad Lorena Fernández Cortés,Teresita de Jesús Saucedo-Molina +3 more
TL;DR: The results showed that DEB and moderate PA were associated with DM; adolescents who engaged in DEB had an 8.64 times higher risk of developing DM, and in agreement with other findings, there were no associations between anthropometric indicators and DM.
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Eating disorder symptomatology: Comparative study between Mexican and Canadian university women
TL;DR: Women from at least two different ethnic groups are vulnerable to the development of eating disorder symptomatology after being exposed to disordered eating behaviors, body thin-ideal internalization and body image dissatisfaction.
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Body Image Dissatisfaction, Obesity and Their Associations with Breastfeeding in Mexican Women, a Cross-Sectional Study
TL;DR: The results highlight the potential relationship between body image concerns and breastfeeding in Mexican women with obesity and the causality of such relationship needs further investigation, ideally using a longitudinal study design.
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The Associations Between Breastfeeding Duration and Body Dissatisfaction, Ethnicity, and Obesity Among Mexican Women, a Cross-Sectional Study, ENSANUT 2012.
TL;DR: Body image concerns should be integrated into a health promotion curriculum to mitigate their negative effect particularly in certain segments of the populations, such as women with obesity and among indigenous women.
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Twenty-year associations between disordered eating behaviors and sociodemographic features in a multiple cross-sectional sample
TL;DR: The authors examined sociodemographic trends in the prevalence of DEB over 20 years in the Australian general population and found that lower age, a higher Accessibility Remoteness Index of Australia (ARIA) score, higher body mass index (BMI), higher educational attainment, and not being in a married or de facto relationship were independently associated with higher adjusted odds for DEB.
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Claudia Sikorski,Melanie Luppa,Marie Kaiser,Heide Glaesmer,Georg Schomerus,Hans-Helmut König,Steffi G. Riedel-Heller +6 more
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