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Many
High School Students
Suffer
Eating Disorders
NEW
YORK (Reuters Health) - Nearly one third of high school girls
and 16% of high school boys show symptoms of an eating disorder,
researchers announced on Thursday. The survey is the first national
screening of high school students for eating disorders.
Dr. S. Bryn
Austin of Children's Hospital in Boston, Massachusetts, presented
her research team's findings at the annual meeting of The Society
for Adolescent Medicine, held in San Diego, California.
``While full-blown
eating disorders are more rare, very unhealthful eating behaviors
are much more common,'' Austin told Reuters Health in a telephone
interview from the meeting.
``It is very
important to get young people to seek help from a healthcare professional
or a counselor, and that's what we hope to accomplish with the
survey. Based on their results, students are encouraged to seek
treatment,'' she said.
The team of
researchers evaluated 5,740 surveys out of 35,000 received from
students from 152 high schools around the United States. The eating
disorder screening surveys were designed to assess the eating
habits and weight concerns of the students--asking them specific
questions about binge-eating, vomiting, exercising and smoking,
for example.
Austin and
colleagues found that 12% of the girls and 4% of the boys surveyed
said that they vomited to control their weight, and 7% of the
girls and 6% of the boys reported binge-eating once per week or
more often, Austin told Reuters Health.
``Binge-eating
or excessive overeating is more than what people experience at
a Thanksgiving Day meal,'' Austin explained. ``These people report
that sometimes eating is a compulsion for them that they can't
stop. It is often in response to negative emotional triggers about
themselves, their body weight or shape.''
The girls
also responded to specific questions about their menstrual cycles.
``Girls with
eating disorders are likely to experience irregular menstrual
cycles or miss their periods completely,'' Austin told Reuters
Health. Of the young women who participated in the survey, those
who reported vomiting as a means to control their weight were
much more likely to have irregular menstrual cycles.
``The results
(of the survey) indicate that a sizable minority of high school
students have significant eating-disorder symptoms and have not
received treatment,'' the researchers conclude.
Reference
Source 89
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