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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: eating disorders + eating disorder + gender  Related to the article below (Last Update: 7/8/2008)


Library Journal
Xpress Reviews?First Look at New Books
Library Journal, NY -
Even though major childhood hurdles are not described at length (eg, potty training gets one paragraph, eating disorders one page), readers will get a sense ...
Large Scale Study Finds Vitamin B6 Deficiency Common in the US
Natural News.com, AZ -
Fatigue, a frequent symptom of many disorders, is a symptom of B6 deficiency. Other signs include cheilosis (sores or cracks at the corners of the mouth), ...
As Mama Used to Say, ?Don't Laugh at Fat People?
Mshale African Community Newspaper, MN - Jul 3, 2008
I also hope that as Hollywood?s demand for super thin bodies continues to drive celebrities and those who wish to be like them to develop eating disorders ...
Memoirs of a Bulimic Black Boy
KPLU, WA - Jul 7, 2008
Seattle based poet Chad Goller-Sojourner chronicles his childhood eating disorder, and also explores issues of race, class and gender in his new solo show ...
Why are we obsessed with female celebs?
Norwich Evening News, UK - Jun 23, 2008
Susan Ringwood, chief executive of Beat, the Norwich-based eating disorder charity, said that although the media, and how it vilifies larger women or those ...
Study: Realistic body images shown on kids' TV
Salt Lake Tribune, United States - Jul 2, 2008
... up prime-time television altogether. "There's clear research showing that, even among the elderly, eating disorders are correlated with media consumption."
The Salk Institute, a leading institution on biological research ...
eMediaWorld.com Newswire Press Release Distribution Service (Press Release), AZ - Jul 3, 2008
"We are hopeful that research on an animal model of this genetic disorder will lead to a better understanding and means of controlling appetite in patients ...
Comfy bikes for seniors and understanding reverse mortgages
Westport Minuteman, CT - Jul 2, 2008
*Low calcium: A lifetime diet low in calcium and vitamin D. *Eating disorders: A history of anorexia or bulimia. *Medications: Certain drugs including ...
'reasons to be pretty' has some ugly words
Newsday, NY - Jun 29, 2008
... of middle-aged lesbian academics during the college's Body Awareness Week - renamed from the previous year's less upbeat Eating Disorder Awareness Week. ...
A woman?s worth
AntiguaSun, Antigua and Barbuda - Jun 17, 2008
Would you like to guess the gender of the third model featured? Yes, it was a male model and his profile listed only his hobbies and place of work. ...
Source: Google News

EATING DISORDER INVENTORY (EDI)
DM Garner, MP Olmsted - Sex and Gender Issues: A Handbook of Tests and Measures, 1990 - books.google.com
... general level of psychological disturbance rather than features specific to patients
with eating disorders"(p. 130). Page 542. 522 Sex and Gender Issues Grant ...

… as Factors in Socioculturally Acquired Vulnerability to Body Dissatisfaction and Eating Disorders. -
MD Siever - Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 1994 - eric.ed.gov
ERIC logo. EJ484601 - Sexual Orientation and Gender as Factors in Socioculturally
Acquired Vulnerability to Body Dissatisfaction and Eating Disorders. ERIC Home ...
-

Relation of media exposure to eating disorder symptomatology: An examination of mediating mechanisms -
E Stice, E Schupak-Neuberg, HE Shaw, RI Stein - Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 1994 - content.apa.org
... This study assessed the relation of media exposure to eating disorder symptoms and
tested whether gender-role endorsement, ideal-body stereotype internalization ...

The Thin Woman: Feminism, Post-Structuralism and the Social Psychology of Anorexia Nervosa -
H MALSON - J. Community Appl. Soc. Psychol, 1999 - doi.wiley.com
... of `anorexia' as well as for feminist approaches to eating disorders. ... to the ways
in which discursive constructions of `anorexia' gender and embodiment are ...

Cinderella's Stepsisters: A Feminist Perspective on Anorexia Nervosa and Bulimia -
M Boskind-Lodahl - Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society, 1976 - UChicago Press
... (1995) THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN FEMININE GENDER ROLE STRESS, BODY IMAGE, AND EATING
DISORDERS. Psychology of Women Quarterly 19:4, 493. Walter Vandereycken. ...

Eating disorders -
CG Fairburn, PJ Harrison - The Lancet, 2003 - Elsevier
... 14. Atypical eating disorders. ... 105 Whether or not there are more general effects
on child development is not known. Management of eating disorders. ...

Eating disorders in males
AE Andersen - Eating disorders and obesity: A comprehensive handbook, 1995 - books.google.com
... Siever, M.(1994). Sexual orientation and gender as factors in socioculturally acquired
vulnerability to body dissatsifaction and eating disorders. ...

[BOOK] Eating Disorders: Obesity, Anorexia Nervosa, and the Person Within
H Bruch - 1973 - books.google.com
Page 2. Page 3. Page 4. EATING DISORDERS Page 5. Also by Hilde Brach Don't Be Afraid
of Jour ChM The Importance of Overweight Studies in Schizophrenia Page 6. ...

[CITATION] Eating disorders inventory
DM Garner, MP Olmsted - Test Critiques, 1994 - Pro-Ed

Unbearable Weight: Feminism, Western Culture, and the Body -
S Bordo - J. Community Appl. Soc. Psychol, 1999 - doi.wiley.com
... on Foucauldian analytics while upholding feminist criticism of Foucault's gender
omissions by ... a tour of feminist thinking within the eating disorders world to ...

Source: Google Scholar
 

Studies to be presented at International Eating Disorders Conference
Gender, ethnic differences may hamper eating disorder diagnosis, say Packard/Stanford researchers

By Krista Conger

STANFORD, Calif. — Eating disorders may be overlooked in some groups—boys and some ethnicities—by physicians accustomed to diagnosing the condition in white teenage girls, say researchers at Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital and the Stanford University School of Medicine.

The problem is compounded when the sufferers don’t display the typical symptoms of disordered eating.

“We need to think more broadly about who struggles with eating disorders,” said adolescent medicine and eating disorder specialist Rebecka Peebles, MD, instructor in pediatrics (adolescent medicine). Peebles pointed out that diagnostic and even treatment criteria were developed with Caucasian women or girls in mind. “We may not be asking the right questions for these other groups at all.”

Article continues below and (thank you)

 

Peebles is presenting the research as two separate abstracts at the annual meeting of the International Eating Disorders Conference on May 4 and May 5 in Baltimore.

In the gender study, Peebles compared 104 boys aged 8 to 19 who had eating disorders with about 1,004 similarly aged girls who had the condition. She found that boys were less likely than girls to have used purging behaviors, such as vomiting or using laxatives, to control their weight in the month prior to the study (23.5 percent vs. 32.4 percent). They were also more likely to be diagnosed with an “Eating Disorder Not Otherwise Specified,” or EDNOS, rather than with anorexia or bulimia, than girls (62.2 percent vs. 49.1 percent), perhaps because they express themselves differently.

“We’re taught to be alert for patients who express a desire to be thin,” said Peebles. “But clinically, boys often talk about wanting to be more fit and eat healthily, which doesn’t set off the same kind of alarm bells.”

Fitness is fine, but rigorous exercise coupled with severely restricted food intake can spell trouble just as surely as the more familiar binging and purging cycles seen in girls. Even though the National Eating Disorders Association estimates that approximately 10 percent of people diagnosed with eating disorders are male, alert parents of boys can still sometimes struggle with convincing their health care provider that their son has an eating disorder.

“There is a perception that boys rarely get eating disorders,” said Peebles, “and many boys undergo pretty extensive medical workups for other conditions, like gastric problems or brain tumors, before their physicians hit on the right diagnosis.”

Ethnic differences may also play into the range of symptoms experienced by people with eating disorders. In the second study, Peebles used a Web-based questionnaire to survey a variety of people who visit Web sites that promote eating disorders about their experiences with the condition. Then she examined differences between ethnic groups, which included Caucasians, African Americans, Hispanics, Asians and Native Americans.

She found that American Indians and Alaskan Natives, although a very small proportion of the overall sample, were significantly more likely than Caucasians to use laxatives to control their weight. Nearly half (46.7 percent) had been hospitalized at least once as a result of their disordered eating, a criteria shared by fewer than one in five Caucasians (13.2 percent), and they reported a longer duration of disease than the other groups.

“We were surprised and intrigued by these preliminary results,” said Peebles, who cautioned that more research is needed. “We know that this group is at high risk for other psychiatric issues, such as alcoholism and PTSD. Our findings suggest that it may be important to screen them for disordered eating.”

The Native Americans who participated in the survey also reported higher maximum lifetime weights and lower minimum lifetime weights than other groups, suggesting more dramatic swings in body size.

Peebles plans to continue her studies to determine how best to diagnose and treat eating disorders in different genders and ethnic groups. “It’s so important to identify these ‘walking wounded’ among us,” she said. “Many people think that only Caucasians or women have weight and body issues, and that other groups just don’t mind. There is a lot of stuff we just don’t know yet.”

Other Stanford and Packard Children’s researchers involved in the work include undergraduate student Aileen Kurobe; medical student Jenny Wilson; James Lock, MD, PhD, professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences; and Iris Litt, MD, the Marron and Mary Elizabeth Kendrick Professor in Pediatrics, emerita.

The projects were funded by the Stanford Institute for Research on Women and Gender, the Stanford Pediatric Research Fund, and Stanford University Women’s Health and Undergraduate Research Programs.

 

APRIL 30, 2007

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Krista Conger| Tel (650) 725-5371
kristac@stanford.edu
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Two studies offer new insights into eating disorders

BY KRISTA CONGER

Parenting a child with an eating disorder—monitoring meals, friends and activities—can be a full-time job. But two new studies from researchers at the medical school and Lucile Packard Children's Hospital indicate a need for increased vigilance in two key areas: Internet use among adolescents with the condition, and pre-teen weight loss in seemingly healthy children.

One study, published in the December issue of Pediatrics, is the first to confirm that pro-eating disorder Web sites may promote dangerous behaviors in adolescents with eating disorders. The second, which appears in the December issue of the Journal of Adolescent Health, indicates that pre-teens with eating disorders tend to lose weight more quickly than adolescents with the condition and weigh comparatively less at diagnosis. Packard Children's adolescent medicine and eating disorder specialist Rebecka Peebles, MD, and Jenny Wilson, a Stanford medical student, collaborated on both studies.

"If parents wouldn't let their kids go out to dinner or talk on the phone with someone they don't know, they should ask themselves what their child might be up to on the computer," Peebles, a medical school pediatrics instructor, said of the findings in the first study. She pointed out that, unlike adults, teens make few distinctions between "real" friends and people they know only online.

In this study, Peebles and Wilson surveyed families of patients who were diagnosed at Packard Children's with an eating disorder between 1997 and 2004. Seventy-six patients, who were between the ages of 10 and 22 at diagnosis, and 106 parents returned an anonymous survey asking about Internet use—including parental restrictions on it—and health outcomes.

About half of the patients surveyed said they had visited Web sites about eating disorders. Ninety-six percent of teens who visited pro-eating disorder Web sites reported learning new dieting and purging techniques. The researchers also found that pro-eating disorder site visitors tended to have a longer duration of disease, spent less time on schoolwork and spent significantly more time online each week than did those who never visited the sites.

Even those sites ostensibly dedicated to helping people recover from eating disorders (pro-recovery sites) aren't harmless. Nearly 50 percent of patients visiting such sites reported learning about new methods to lose weight or to purge.

"Parents and physicians need to realize that the Internet is essentially an unmonitored media forum," said Peebles. "It's just not possible to completely control the content of an interactive site."

While about 50 percent of parents were aware of the existence of pro-eating disorder sites, only 28 percent had discussed these sites with their child. Fewer still, only about 20 percent, reported placing limits on either the time their child spent online or on the sites they visited.

Parents aren't the only ones who may not recognize trouble brewing. Peebles and Wilson found in their second study that younger eating disorder patients may be at risk for more rapid weight loss than adolescents and frequently have atypical presentations that may make diagnosis more difficult.

"We were very surprised and concerned to find that younger patients lost weight significantly faster than adolescent patients," said Peebles, who pointed out that growth before puberty is critical to future development. "Children should be growing rapidly during pre-adolescence. But these kids had not only stopped gaining, they'd even lost weight."

Adult-specific diagnostic criteria for such eating disorders as anorexia and bulimia muddy the issue, said Peebles, referring to missed menses and ideal body weight percentages, neither of which are applicable to prepubescent girls who may have already stunted their height by denying themselves needed calories.

"They may not be less than 85 percent of their ideal body weight according to a standard growth chart," she said, "but it's very possible that, without their eating disorder, they would have been significantly taller and heavier." It's also sometimes difficult to tell whether young children display the same kind of disordered body image disturbance as older children with eating disorders, who often proclaim themselves "fat" or "disgusting."

"Young kids may truly not know why they don't want to eat," said Peebles. "They just don't want to be bigger." As a result, more than 60 percent of patients younger than 13 are diagnosed with an "Eating Disorder Not Otherwise Specified," or EDNOS.

Other surprises of the research include the facts that younger patients were more likely to be male than those older than 13, and that one in five patients younger than 13 had experimented with vomiting as a weight-loss technique.

"Pediatricians and parents should not think of weight loss, or even lack of weight gain in a pre-teen, as a phase," cautioned Peebles. "If a child expresses wanting to lose weight, you should take it seriously."

http://news-service.stanford.edu/news/2006/december6/med-eating-120606.html

Stanford Report, May 25, 2005

'Thinspiration' Web sites encourage eating disorders

Preliminary research suggests that teens suffering from anorexia and bulimia who visit these sites miss more school and spend more time in the hospital than their peers who don't surf the net

BY KRISTA CONGER

Sarah Staley/Lucile Packard Children's Hospital

Adolescent medicine specialist Rebecka Peebles and medical student Jenny Wilson have been investigating hundreds of Web sites that cater to youths with eating disorders, offering questionable health tips.

Web sites that actively promote anorexia and bulimia are used by a significant number of adolescents with eating disorders, according to a forthcoming study from the School of Medicine and Lucile Packard Children's Hospital researchers.

Visitors to these sites are using them to obtain tips on weight loss and how to hide their food-avoidance tactics from friends and family members, the researchers found. The study also revealed that these teens are spending less time on schoolwork than their peers and more time in the hospital than those who do not use the sites.

"This is the first study that begins to examine the health effects of frequenting these sites, which outnumber those dedicated to recovery by five to one," said Jenny Wilson, a medical student and a co-author of the study.

Research published in 2003 estimated that there were as many as 500 Web sites advocating anorexia nervosa, but eating disorders specialists believe that the numbers have increased since that time. Many of the sites are designed and maintained by teens or young adults with eating disorders.

"These Web sites are founded on the mistaken belief that eating disorders are not a disease, but a way of life," said co-author Rebecka Peebles , MD , an instructor in pediatric medicine and a member of Lucile Packard Children's Hospital's Division of Adolescent Medicine. "They are well-designed and alluring, often with a gateway emphasizing the danger of the site that can be attractive to teens."

Peebles, who studies both eating disorders and obesity, and Wilson collaborated on the research, which was presented earlier this month in poster format at the annual meeting of the Pediatric Academic Societies in Washington, D.C. Iris Litt, MD, the Marron and Mary Elizabeth Kendrick Professor in Pediatrics and a specialist in adolescent medicine at the hospital, was the senior advisor for the work. Litt is also former editor-in-chief of the Journal of Adolescent Health.

The research is the culmination of a preliminary study conducted through an anonymous survey of medical histories and Internet use sent to the families of adolescents diagnosed with an eating disorder at the hospital since 1997. Patients and parents were asked to fill out separate forms documenting their struggles with the condition. Fifty-two adolescents and 77 parents responded.

Wilson and Peebles found that 40 percent of the adolescents who responded had visited Web sites promoting eating disorders and 34 percent had visited sites dedicated to recovery from the condition. About one-quarter frequented both types of sites and half the respondents had visited neither. Parents of teens who visited the sites promoting the disorder were more likely to know about the sites and to be concerned about the information their child accessed online than were parents of non-users.

Although adolescents who visited the pro-eating disorder sites reported spending less time on schoolwork and more time in the hospital, they did not differ from those who didn't visit these sites in a number of other health measures: how their weight compared with their ideal body weight, the duration of their eating disorder, the number of missed menses and the presence or absence of osteoporosis.

While the sites provide "thinspiration" in the form of pictures, body weight goal charts, exercises and low-calorie recipes, they don't uniformly tout the perceived advantages of eating disorders.

"There is a profound ambivalence that embodies the pro-eating disorder sites," said Peebles. "There are discussions in chat rooms and on bulletin boards about how much the disorder pains sufferers and cautioning others against trying too hard to lose weight."

The researchers also found that about one-quarter of those visiting sites intended to help teens recover from eating disorders actually learned about and tried new weight loss techniques or diet aids as a result of their visit. Of course, teens learned similar tactics from sites promoting eating disorders: more than 60 percent of adolescents visiting those sites tried new techniques as a result.

The researchers' study underscores how dependent teens are on the Internet for health information and peer support. Adolescents typically use the sites promoting eating disorders as a forum to express their innermost thoughts and feelings, the researchers said. Perhaps as a result, teens visiting the pro-eating disorder sites were more likely to describe themselves as recovering from their disorder than were their peers who did not visit the sites.

"It's such a dichotomy," said Peebles. "Teens enter the sites promoting eating disorders possibly to gain solidarity and to express their pride in and publicize what they see as a lifestyle choice. At the same time they are cautioning others not to follow in their footsteps. Teens in the midst of an eating disorder need to voice what they want: to continue to lose weight.

"While many people believe the Web sites should be shut down," Peebles added, "it could be a very isolating experience for the users."

The researchers cautioned that the results of this study are preliminary. They plan a larger, prospective study designed to more closely follow health outcomes in newly diagnosed eating disorder patients who visit the sites. But in the meantime, they hope their results will serve as a wake-up call for physicians treating adolescents with eating disorders, who may underestimate the influence the Web sites may be having on their patients.

"Medical professionals need to recognize the important role the Internet is playing in the education and mis-education of their patients," said Litt. "These Web sites offer peer group support, which can be used for good or for evil."

 

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