Community Violence Exposure and Eating Disorder Symptoms among Belgian, Russian and US Adolescents: Cross-Country and Gender Perspectives.

IF 2.3 3区 医学 Q2 PSYCHIATRY
Child Psychiatry & Human Development Pub Date : 2025-06-01 Epub Date: 2023-08-22 DOI:10.1007/s10578-023-01590-1
Johan Isaksson, Martina Isaksson, Andrew Stickley, Robert Vermeiren, Roman Koposov, Mary Schwab-Stone, Vladislav Ruchkin
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Community violence exposure (CVE) is one of the most common adverse childhood experiences worldwide. Despite this, its potential effect on disordered eating in adolescents from different cultures is underexplored. In the present cross-sectional study, self-reported data were collected from 9751 students (Mean age = 14.27) from Belgium, Russia and the US on CVE (witnessing violence and violence victimization), eating disorder (ED) symptoms (ED thoughts with associated compensatory behaviors), and comorbid symptoms of posttraumatic stress, depression and anxiety. Increased CVE (from no exposure to witnessing to victimization) was associated with more ED symptoms, and the associations remained significant after adjusting for comorbid conditions. The associations were similar for adolescents across the three countries. No gender differences were observed in the association between CVE and ED symptoms, even though girls in general reported more ED symptoms than boys. We conclude that CVE appears to be associated with ED symptoms in three culturally different samples of adolescents.

比利时、俄罗斯和美国青少年的社区暴力暴露和饮食失调症状:跨国和性别视角
社区暴力暴露(CVE)是全世界最常见的不良童年经历之一。尽管如此,它对来自不同文化背景的青少年饮食失调的潜在影响尚未得到充分探讨。在本横断面研究中,收集了来自比利时、俄罗斯和美国的9751名学生(平均年龄= 14.27岁)关于CVE(目睹暴力和暴力受害)、饮食失调(ED)症状(ED思想与相关补偿行为)以及创伤后应激、抑郁和焦虑共病症状的自我报告数据。CVE的增加(从没有接触到目击到受害)与更多的ED症状相关,并且在调整了合并症条件后,相关性仍然显著。在这三个国家的青少年中,这种关联是相似的。在CVE和ED症状之间没有观察到性别差异,尽管女孩通常比男孩报告更多的ED症状。我们得出结论,CVE似乎与三个文化不同的青少年样本中的ED症状有关。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.50
自引率
3.40%
发文量
174
期刊介绍: Child Psychiatry & Human Development is an interdisciplinary international journal serving the groups represented by child and adolescent psychiatry, clinical child/pediatric/family psychology, pediatrics, social science, and human development. The journal publishes research on diagnosis, assessment, treatment, epidemiology, development, advocacy, training, cultural factors, ethics, policy, and professional issues as related to clinical disorders in children, adolescents, and families. The journal publishes peer-reviewed original empirical research in addition to substantive and theoretical reviews.
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