Stice E, Bearman S K
Department of Psychology, University of Texas at Austin, 78712, USA.
Dev Psychol. 2001 Sep;37(5):597-607. doi: 10.1037//0012-1649.37.5.597.
Using data from a longitudinal community study (N = 231), the authors tested whether body-image and eating disturbances might partially explain the increase in depression observed in adolescent girls. Initial pressure to be thin, thin-ideal internalization, body dissatisfaction, dieting, and bulimic symptoms, but not body mass, predicted subsequent increases in depressive symptoms, as did increases in these risk factors over the study. There was also prospective support for each of the hypothesized mediational relations linking these risk factors to increases in depressive symptoms. Effects remained significant when other established gender-nonspecific risk factors for depression (social support and emotionality) were statistically controlled. Results provide support for the assertion that body-image and eating disturbances, operating above and beyond gender-nonspecific risk factors, contribute to the elevated depression in adolescent girls.
作者利用一项纵向社区研究的数据(N = 231),检验了身体意象和饮食失调是否可能部分解释了在青春期女孩中观察到的抑郁增加情况。追求瘦的初始压力、对瘦理想的内化、身体不满、节食和暴食症状,而非体重,预测了随后抑郁症状的增加,研究期间这些风险因素的增加也有同样的作用。对于将这些风险因素与抑郁症状增加联系起来的每个假设中介关系,也有前瞻性支持。当对其他已确定的非性别特异性抑郁风险因素(社会支持和情绪性)进行统计控制时,效应仍然显著。结果支持了这样的论断,即身体意象和饮食失调在非性别特异性风险因素之外起作用,导致了青春期女孩抑郁程度的升高。