首页> 外文期刊>The International journal of eating disorders >Disparities in eating disorder diagnosis and treatment according to weight status, race/ethnicity, socioeconomic background, and sex among college students
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Disparities in eating disorder diagnosis and treatment according to weight status, race/ethnicity, socioeconomic background, and sex among college students

机译:根据体重状况,种族/种族,社会经济背景和大学生性别的差异进食疾病诊断和治疗

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Objective: Eating disorders (EDs) present a significant threat to the health of adolescents and young adults, yet remain under-diagnosed and under-treated at a population-level. EDs have historically been thought to afflict “skinny, white, affluent girls” (the SWAG stereotype). As such, higher-weight individuals, racial/ethnic minorities, those from socioeconomically disadvantaged backgrounds, and males may not recognize their need for treatment, may not be properly screened for EDs, and/or may not be referred to treatment. Method: Using large-scale survey data from the healthy bodies study, we examined variations in prevalence of perceived need for ED treatment, ED diagnosis, past-year ED treatment, and treatment barriers according to weight status, race, socioeconomic background, and sex among undergraduate and graduate students with symptoms of an ED (N = 1,747). Results: Among students with symptoms of an ED, 30.7% perceived a need for treatment, 10.5% had received a diagnosis, and 13.6% had received treatment in the past year. Individual characteristics were highly associated with perceived need, diagnosis, and past-year treatment. Females were more likely than males to perceive a need for treatment (OR = 1.97), to be diagnosed (OR = 4.66), and to be treated (OR = 1.64) for their ED symptoms. Socioeconomic background was associated with perceived need for treatment and past-year treatment, with students from affluent backgrounds having higher odds of perceiving need (OR = 1.52) and of receiving treatment (OR = 1.89) compared with their non-affluent peers. Discussion: At a population-level, the unmet need for ED treatment disproportionately affects certain groups. Stereotypes about who develops EDs could contribute to disparities in ED treatment and outcomes
机译:目的:饮食障碍(EDS)对青少年和年轻成年人的健康产生了重大威胁,但在人口层面仍然被诊断且未治疗。历史上,曾被认为折磨“瘦弱,白,富裕的女孩”(赃物刻板印象)。因此,高重量的个人,种族/少数群体,来自社会经济弱势背景的种族/少数群体,以及男性可能无法识别其对治疗的需求,而EDS和/或可能没有被称为治疗。方法:使用来自健康体的大规模调查数据研究,我们根据体重状况,种族,社会经济背景和性别检查患有ED治疗,ED诊断,过去年度ED治疗和治疗障碍的患病率的变化。本科和研究生中,具有ED的症状(n = 1,747)。结果:患有ED症状的学生,30.7%感知治疗需求,10.5%已接受诊断,并在过去一年接受过治疗的13.6%。个体特征与感知需要,诊断和过去的待遇高度相关。女性比男性更可能感知治疗(或= 1.97),待诊断(或= 4.66),并被治疗(或= 1.64)进行其ED症状。社会经济背景与感知需要治疗和前一年治疗有关,富裕背景的学生具有较高的感知需求(或= 1.52)和接受治疗(或= 1.89)与其非富裕的同龄人相比。讨论:在人口级别,ED治疗的未满足需求不成比例地影响某些群体。关于世卫组织开发EDS的刻板印象可能导致ED治疗和结果的差异

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