Project Details
Description
Adolescent girls are increasingly concerned with weight and thinness.
When attempting to lose weight, girls often employ unhealthy practices
such as fad diets or purging behaviors including induced vomiting and
laxative use rather than adhering to a balanced diet and engaging in
appropriate amounts of physical activity. Eating problems such as
dieting, preoccupation with weight, and bingeing emerge during the
adolescent years and have been associated with several serious health
problems over and above frank eating disorders.
The specific goals of this proposal are: (1) to investigate the
development of eating behaviors during adolescence and young adulthood
and the continuum of behaviors that constitute unhealthy patterns of
eating, and to identify the specific patterns of behavior that lead to
and result from engaging in unhealthy behaviors during adolescence or
young adulthood; (b) to investigate the interrelationship of depression
with eating disorders as well as the association of depressive affect and
eating behaviors and problems in order to determine if common
developmental processes apply across pathologies; and (c) to investigate
whether, to what extent, and how relations in the family and maternal
psychopathology are associated with the development of disturbed eating
or clinical disorders.
These goals will be achieved through the investigation of a sample of 238
young women (between the ages of 21 and 23) who have been followed
longitudinally by this group of researchers for 8 years. The patterns
of eating behaviors will be coded from interviews conducted with each
young woman in the past year. This information will be analyzed in
conjunction with questionnaire data, also obtained from these women, on
family relationships, problem behaviors, psychological well-being, and
eating attitudes. Comparisons to earlier reports of behaviors and
functioning in these domains is also planned in order to assess the
developmental processes associated with unhealthy and healthy behaviors.
This is perhaps the only prospective, longitudinal investigation of
eating behaviors and psychological well-being which has traversed the
adolescent decade.
Status | Finished |
---|---|
Effective start/end date | 2/1/90 → 7/31/96 |
Funding
- National Institute of Child Health and Human Development
- Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development
ASJC Scopus Subject Areas
- Psychiatry and Mental health
- Education
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