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Associations between adolescent risk for restrictive disordered eating and long‐term outcomes related to somatic symptoms, body mass index, and poor well‐being.
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Catalogue Record 79476
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Catalogue Record 79476
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Catalogue Information
Field name
Details
Nuova numerazione
79476
Collocazione
UPS BIBL CENTR SL-II-372
Autore
LANDSTEDT, E.
Titolo
Associations between adolescent risk for restrictive disordered eating and long‐term outcomes related to somatic symptoms, body mass index, and poor well‐being. Parte componente di periodico
Descrizione fisica
pp. 496-518.
Nota generale
Estratto da: British Journal of Health Psychology 2018, 23, 2.
Riassunto
Objective: To date, no longitudinal, community‐based studies have examined the association between disordered eating emerging in adolescence and long‐term physical well‐being. This study sought to explore the longitudinal associations between risk for restrictive disordered eating (DE‐R; those not presenting with binge–purge symptoms) in adolescence and trajectories of functional somatic symptoms (FSS) and body mass index (BMI), and several indicators of poor physical well‐being across early‐ to mid‐adulthood, including medication, number of doctor visits, and sick leave. Design: Data were obtained from the Northern Swedish Cohort Study (N = 1,001), a prospective longitudinal study including four time points from age 16 to 42 years. Methods: A cumulative measure of DE‐R risk was computed. Latent class growth analysis was used to identify subpopulation trajectories of FSS and BMI. The three‐step method for auxiliary variables and logistic regressions were used to assess associations between DE‐R and the trajectory classes as well as indicators of poor physical well‐being. Results: Three trajectories were identified for FSS. A gender by BMI interaction led to a classification of four BMI trajectories in men, but three in women. The presence of DE‐R risk in adolescence increased odds of unfavourable FSS development, increasing BMI in women, and continually low BMI in men. Indicators of poor physical well‐being at ages 21, 30, and 42 years were associated with DE‐R risk in adolescence. Conclusions: Data spanning nearly three decades suggest that physical well‐being impairment is related to DE‐R risk measured earlier in life, underscoring the urgency for targeted, gender‐sensitive preventive interventions for teenagers.
Tipo di documento
RICERCA.
Soggetto
DISTURBI.
ALIMENTAZIONE.
SALUTE.
ADOLESCENTI.
QUALITÀ.
VITA.
BENESSERE.
PREVENZIONE.
SVEZIA.
Ambito
Psicologico
Autore Secondario
HAMMARSTROM, A.
FAIRWEATHER-SCHMIDT, A. K.
WADE, T.
Titolo correlato
British Journal of Health Psychology 2018, 23, 2.
Accesso online
https://doi.org/10.1111/bjhp.12301
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