Associations Between Weight Discrimination, Eating-Disorder-Related Psychiatric Impairment, and Eating-Disorder Treatment Interest Across the Weight Spectrum

IF 4.7 2区 医学 Q1 NUTRITION & DIETETICS
Marianna L. Thomeczek, Kelsie T. Forbush, Yiyang Chen, Sonakshi Negi, Sarah Johnson-Munguia, Alexa M. L'Insalata, Samiya Rasheed, Emily Like, Jacquelyn McDonald
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Abstract

Objective

Only approximately 20% of college students with an eating disorder (ED) seek treatment. One barrier to seeking treatment is weight discrimination. Past research demonstrates that experiencing weight discrimination is associated with increased ED risk and decreased in-person treatment engagement. Weight discrimination may be a particularly relevant treatment barrier for students who have a higher body weight given their higher likelihood of experiencing weight discrimination.

Methods

College students with a probable ED diagnosis (N = 372; Mage = 23.94; 73.12% women, 18.55% men, 6.18% another gender; 11.29% Asian, 4.57% Black, 12.63% Hispanic, 83.60% White, 4.84% Native American, and 0.54% another race) completed an online self-report survey that included the Clinical Impairment Assessment (CIA), Experience of Weight Discrimination (EWD) Scale, and a 0–100 scale to indicate interest in participating in virtual guided self-help ED treatment.

Results

Linear regression showed significant positive relationships between weight discrimination and ED-related psychiatric impairment and treatment interest.

Discussion

Elevations in CIA scores corroborate past literature that suggested that weight discrimination was positively related to ED psychopathology. Contrary to past research, college students who experienced weight discrimination had greater treatment interest. Students who experience weight discrimination may view virtual self-guided treatment as less weight-stigmatizing due to the “do-it-yourself” approach and no in-person interactions. Findings highlight the potential impacts of weight discrimination on acceptability of ED-related care. Future research is needed to identify ways to reduce weight discrimination and promote weight-inclusive practices in the medical system.

体重歧视、与进食障碍相关的精神损伤和进食障碍治疗兴趣在不同体重范围内的关联。
目的:在患有饮食失调症(ED)的大学生中,只有约 20% 的人寻求治疗。寻求治疗的一个障碍是体重歧视。过去的研究表明,体重歧视与饮食失调风险的增加和现场治疗参与度的降低有关。体重歧视对于体重较重的学生来说可能是一个特别相关的治疗障碍,因为他们更有可能遭遇体重歧视:被诊断出可能患有 ED 的大学生(N = 372;Mage = 23.94;73.12% 为女性,18.55% 为男性,6.18% 为其他性别;11.29% 为亚裔,4.57% 为黑人,12.63% 为西班牙裔,83.60% 为白人,4.84% 为美国原住民,0.54% 为其他种族)完成了一项在线调查。54%为其他种族)完成了一项在线自我报告调查,调查内容包括临床损害评估(CIA)、体重歧视体验量表(EWD)和 0-100 分值,以表明他们是否有兴趣参加虚拟指导的自助 ED 治疗:线性回归结果显示,体重歧视与 ED 相关精神损害和治疗兴趣之间存在明显的正相关关系:讨论:CIA分数的升高证实了过去的文献表明体重歧视与ED精神病理学呈正相关。与过去的研究相反,经历过体重歧视的大学生对治疗更感兴趣。由于采用了 "自己动手 "的方法,而且没有面对面的互动,因此经历过体重歧视的学生可能会认为虚拟自我指导治疗对体重的侮辱较少。研究结果凸显了体重歧视对接受 ED 相关治疗的潜在影响。未来的研究需要找出减少体重歧视的方法,并在医疗系统中推广体重包容性实践。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
10.00
自引率
12.70%
发文量
204
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: Articles featured in the journal describe state-of-the-art scientific research on theory, methodology, etiology, clinical practice, and policy related to eating disorders, as well as contributions that facilitate scholarly critique and discussion of science and practice in the field. Theoretical and empirical work on obesity or healthy eating falls within the journal’s scope inasmuch as it facilitates the advancement of efforts to describe and understand, prevent, or treat eating disorders. IJED welcomes submissions from all regions of the world and representing all levels of inquiry (including basic science, clinical trials, implementation research, and dissemination studies), and across a full range of scientific methods, disciplines, and approaches.
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