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. 1999 Mar 20;318(7186):765-8.
doi: 10.1136/bmj.318.7186.765.

Onset of adolescent eating disorders: population based cohort study over 3 years

Affiliations

Onset of adolescent eating disorders: population based cohort study over 3 years

G C Patton et al. BMJ. .

Abstract

Objective: To study the predictors of new eating disorders in an adolescent cohort.

Design: Cohort study over 3 years with six waves.

Subjects: Students, initially aged 14-15 years, from 44 secondary schools in the state of Victoria, Australia.

Outcome measures: Weight (kg), height (cm), dieting (adolescent dieting scale), psychiatric morbidity (revised clinical interview schedule), and eating disorder (branched eating disorders test). Eating disorder (partial syndrome) was defined when a subject met two criteria for either anorexia nervosa or bulimia nervosa according to the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, fourth edition (DSM-IV).

Results: At the start of the study, 3.3% (29/888) of female subjects and 0.3% (2/811) of male subjects had partial syndromes of eating disorders. The rate of development of new eating disorder per 1000 person years of observation was 21.8 in female subjects and 6.0 in male subjects. Female subjects who dieted at a severe level were 18 times more likely to develop an eating disorder than those who did not diet, and female subjects who dieted at a moderate level were five times more likely to develop an eating disorder than those who did not diet. Psychiatric morbidity predicted the onset of eating disorder independently of dieting status so that those subjects in the highest morbidity category had an almost sevenfold increased risk of developing an eating disorder. After adjustment for earlier dieting and psychiatric morbidity, body mass index, extent of exercise, and sex were not predictive of new eating disorders.

Conclusions: Dieting is the most important predictor of new eating disorders. Differences in the incidence of eating disorders between sexes were largely accounted for by the high rates of earlier dieting and psychiatric morbidity in the female subjects. In adolescents, controlling weight by exercise rather than diet restriction seems to carry less risk of development of eating disorders.

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Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Participation rates of 2032 secondary school students in adolescent health cohort study in Victoria, Australia
Figure 2
Figure 2
Incidence rates (95% confidence intervals) for eating disorder among female secondary school students classed according to dieting level and psychiatric morbidity (low or high scores for clinical interview schedule) 6 months earlier

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