skip to main |
skip to sidebar
They’re the prime demographic for developing eating disorders, yet new research out of the University of Cincinnati suggests that it could be difficult for college students to notice the warning signs.
On Oct. 31, Ashlee Hoffman, a UC doctoral student in health promotion and education, will present her research, titled, “University Students’ Knowledge of An Ability to Identify Disordered Eating, Warning Signs and Risk Factors,” at the American Public Health Association’s 139th annual meeting and exposition in Washington, DC.
Disordered eating, Hoffman explains, involves unhealthy habits over time that can lead up to, but may not yet fit the medical diagnoses of an eating disorder such as anorexia or bulimia.
Hoffman’s poster research presentation is based on her survey of 428 college students. The survey examined whether they could differentiate between the myths and facts surrounding disordered eating, as well as the risk factors and warning signs.
The survey also revealed that one out of four survey participants reported “lifetime involvement in disordered eating,” and that 50 percent of the participants knew someone who had an eating disorder.
Hoffman says the majority of the study participants could identify the most common risk factors associated with disordered eating, such as depression and anxiety. However, the students who reported longtime disordered eating were the most unlikely group – among males, females, freshmen, sophomores, juniors and seniors – to correctly identify risk factors.
The study also found that only a moderate percentage of the students surveyed could identify other risk factors that could trigger disordered eating, such as a recent life change, a critical family member or involvement in a sport that emphasizes being lean.
Females were significantly more likely than males to know risk factors as well as warning signs of disordered eating, such as abnormal weight loss, purging and distorted body image.
Hoffman’s survey also found that college freshmen and sophomores were more familiar with the primary risk factors than upperclassmen and graduate students.
Figures from the National Institute of Mental Health in 2004 found that eating disorders affected 24 million Americans – with the majority of sufferers between the ages of 12 and 25. “Eating disorders hold the highest death rate out of any mental illness affecting this age group, with a large number of cases ending in suicide,” Hoffman says. “The survey also found that some students mistakenly believe disordered eating is a vanity issue, when in fact, it is a compulsive, addictive behavior that sufferers can use as a coping mechanism for stress.”
Hoffman says that her future research will explore how to better educate college-age students about identifying disordered eating, as well as how to open the doors of communication with friends who they suspect might be struggling with disordered eating. “It’s an issue that’s been long perceived as a taboo subject, partly because of the efforts that people make in hiding disordered eating,” Hoffman says. “If it’s not appropriately addressed in conversation, it can make the problem even worse.”
Secondary researchers on the study were Keith King, UC professor of health promotion and education, and Rebecca Vidourek, UC assistant professor of human services.
The APHA Annual Meeting and Exposition is described as the oldest and largest gathering of public health professionals in the world – addressing current and emerging health science, policy and practice in preventing illness and promoting health.
Source: University of Cincinnati [October 31, 2011]
Blog Archive
-
▼
2011
(220)
-
▼
November
(143)
- Violent video games alter brain function in young men
- Eating fish reduces risk of Alzheimer's disease
- Dieters should eat foods rich in protein, mostly f...
- Environment and Diet leave their prints on the heart
- Study debunks stereotype that men think about sex ...
- Original Thinkers More Likely to Cheat, Study Finds
- Scientists ID ‘Morning Person’ Gene
- A Vaccination Against Social Prejudice
- Study Looks at the Nature of Change in Our Aging, ...
- When errors improve performance: Model describes h...
-
Adenoviruses can cause respiratory, eye, and inte...
- 3pm slump? Why a sugar rush may not be the answer
- The ethics of smart drugs
- Denying mental qualities to animals in order to ea...
- DNA discovery may boost stem cell safety
- Scientists identify defect in brain cell channel t...
- Exercise helps us to eat a healthy diet
- Finger (mal)formation reveals surprise function of...
- Scientists Uncover new role for gene in maintainin...
- Researchers surprised to find fatty liver disease ...
- Dream sleep takes sting out of painful memories
- Incidences and severity of prostate cancer correla...
- Is short stature associated with a 'shortage' of g...
- Physical activity impacts overall quality of sleep
- Hefty impact of poor eating habits
- Bat plant could give some cancers a devil of a time
- Psychopaths' brains show differences in structure ...
- Why has synesthesia survived evolution?
- New Evidence Links Virus to Brain Cancer
- Chew gum, lose weight
- Tuning out: How brains benefit from meditation
- Severity of heart attack is dependent on the time ...
- Seeing cancer in three dimensions
- How cancer cells get by on a starvation diet
- Nerve cells key to making sense of our senses
- Milk thistle stops lung cancer... in mice
- Researchers gain new insight into the chromosome s...
- Walking through doorways causes forgetting, new re...
- Researcher determines how Legionnaires’ bacteria p...
- Unraveling how a mutation can lead to psychiatric ...
- The brain's zoom button
- How to avoid heart disease and cancer at the same ...
- Today's teens will die younger of heart disease
- TV viewing poses greater risk than computer use fo...
- On track to getting even fatter
- Study IDs new genetic links to impulsivity, alcoho...
- Childhood obesity - what are the health risks?
- Garlic oil component may form treatment to protect...
- Study shows left side of brain more active in immo...
- New MRI technique to diagnose or rule out Alzheime...
- Low risk? Women and young men responsible for larg...
- Brain, repair thyself: Studies highlight brain's r...
- Mental Illness: Probing the causes of schizophreni...
- The serotonin system in women's brains is damaged ...
- Moderate drinking and cardiovascular health: here ...
- New Heart Cells Increase by 30 Percent After Stem ...
- Gene impedes recovery from alcoholism
- New report calls for decriminalization of assisted...
- Report answers questions about E. coli: The good, ...
- No extraordinary effects from microwave and mobile...
- Uncovering a key player in metastasis
- Molecular link between diabetes and cancer described
- Blood pressure and stroke risk gets more complicated
- Should doctors encourage people to donate a kidney...
- Stop signal discovered for skin cancer
- Adolescent sex linked to adult body, mood troubles...
- Alcoholism is linked to higher rates of general an...
- Is a stranger genetically wired to be trustworthy?...
- Breakthrough in understanding the genetics of high...
- Malaria's Achilles' heel revealed?
- Obese monkeys lose weight on drug that attacks blo...
- Under money strains, some older adults may turn to...
- People with Parkinson's disease more likely to hav...
- Biologists slow the aging process... in fruit flies
- Negative anti-smoking ads may overlook intended au...
- Researcher provides further evidence that slow eat...
- Psychologists chase down sleep demons
- Researchers identify diabetes link to cognitive im...
- Investigating imagination: Research shows we all e...
- Brain stimulator shown to reduce 'untreatable' epi...
- A fish test to make food safer
- Is drinking water from plastic pipes harmful?
- Using Viagra to combat malignant melanoma
- Both sexism and racism are similar mental processes
- Study suggests increased risk of schizophrenia in ...
- Researchers find way to screen for broad range of ...
- Research reveals when and why students smoke
- Which way you lean — physically — affects your dec...
- Study examines racial and ethnic variations in sub...
- Your stroke risk profile may also help predict you...
- Metabolic protein plays unexpected role in tumor c...
- Process important to brain development studied in ...
- HIV study identifies key cellular defence mechanism
- Model of enzyme's structure could spur new therapies
- What the brain sees after the eye stops looking
- Researchers investigate link between autoimmune di...
- Researchers discover why measles spreads so quickly
- Brain parasite directly alters brain chemistry
- Body weight, sleep-disordered breathing and cognit...
- Drinking coffee could help those with liver diseas...
0 comments:
Post a Comment