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Girls With Eating Disorders
Fans of Fitness Magazines
NEW
YORK (Reuters Health) - Teenage girls who use dieting tactics
such as appetite suppressant pills, laxatives, vomiting after
eating or severely restricting their calories are more likely
to be heavy readers of women's health and fitness magazines, a
team of researchers reports.
``We found
there was a moderate to strong positive association between reading
frequency and these dieting behaviors,'' lead author Dr. Steven
R. Thomsen, associate professor of communications at Brigham Young
University, told Reuters Health.
To investigate
whether there is a correlation between eating problems among teenage
girls and the growth in circulation of health-related magazines
targeted at young women, the researchers surveyed 498 girls at
two Salt Lake City-area high schools, asking them about their
weight loss methods and their magazine reading.
The findings
were published in the May/June issue of the American Journal of
Health Education. The research was funded by a grant from the
Wendell Ashton Fund, Thomsen said.
The study
found that eating disorders were common: 15% of the girls said
they had taken diet pills, 11% had used laxatives, 9% had made
themselves vomit, and slightly more than half had restricted their
calories to less than 1,200 a day as part of a diet.
Overall, 92%
of the girls said they read health and fitness magazines, with
45% of the girls reporting they read the magazines frequently,
or at least once a month.
However, the
researchers found that girls who used laxatives, diet pills, vomited
or ate restricted diets were more likely than girls who did not
use such dieting behaviors to be heavy readers of the magazines.
For example,
73% of girls who used diet pills were frequent readers of the
magazines, while only 42% of girls who did not use diet pills
were frequent readers. Similarly, 79% of the girls who vomited
to control weight gain were frequent readers of the magazines,
compared to only 43% of girls who did not vomit to control weight
gain.
However, the
study does not prove that the magazines caused such a reaction
in the girls. It is also possible, Thomsen noted, that girls with
a propensity to abusive dieting sought out such magazines for
dieting tips and ideas.
``We can't
state that one causes the other,'' Thomsen said. ''Based on all
the previous research we've done and what these young women have
told us, I believe that young women who already have begun to
develop eating disorders may turn to these magazines for reinforcement
and information. I think the best argument is that they serve
as a perpetuating function rather than an initiating function.''
Thomsen said
that editors and writers for the magazines need to keep in mind
that these women may distort the health-oriented messages they
send. ``They need to be aware that there is a group that takes
a message different than what it is intended to be,'' he said.
``Even when these magazines attempt to advise or suggest moderation,
sometimes, the young women focus on the images and pictures, ignoring
the advice but remember seeing thin bodies.''
Finally,
parents should ``not panic'' if their daughters read the magazines,
but should investigate the girls' motives for doing so, he said.
``I would question, 'why are you reading them, how do you feel
about your body,''' he said. ``That would give me a cue to the
mental state of my daughter.''
SOURCE:
American Journal of Health Education 2001; 32: 130-135.
Reference
Source 89
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