Toro Josep, Gomez-Peresmitré Gilda, Sentis Joan, Vallés Antoni, Casulà Vanesa, Castro Josefina, Pineda Gisela, Leon Rodrigo, Platas Silvia, Rodriguez Rosalia
Dept. of Psychiatry and Clinical Psychobiology, Universitat de Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain.
Soc Psychiatry Psychiatr Epidemiol. 2006 Jul;41(7):556-65. doi: 10.1007/s00127-006-0067-x. Epub 2006 May 9.
To compare the prevalence of eating disorders (ED), socio-cultural risk factors, and body image characteristics in two populations of female adolescents, one Mexican and one Spanish, from similar socio-economic backgrounds.
A total of 467 Spanish and 329 Mexican girls aged from 11-12 to 17-18 years were assessed using the Eating Attitude Test-26 (EAT-26), the CETCA (Eating Disorders Assessment Questionnaire), the CIMEC (Questionnaire on Influences on Body Shape Model), and a survey of socio-demographic and risk factors produced for this study.
One out of four subjects showed a significant risk of an eating disorder and 6-7% probably already had one. No significant differences were found between the two samples. Significant differences were found in risk behaviors: more Spanish girls reported body dissatisfaction and binging; more Mexican girls had a history of psychiatric and psychological treatment, pressure from parents and friends to lose weight, dieting, physical activity and vomiting to lose weight, and a history of greater weight loss. In both the groups around 50% of subjects wanted to increase the size of their breasts. However, significantly more Mexican girls desired thinner arms and narrower shoulders and back, and more Spanish girls wanted thinner hips, buttocks, and legs, parts of the body that many Mexicans wanted to increase.
Risk behaviors and the ideal body models of these Spanish and Mexican adolescent girls varied significantly, indicating major socio-cultural differences. However, the prevalence of ED was similar. Further research should aim to clarify whether the similarities found between this Spanish sample and a Mexican sample taken from an upper-middle class urban environment, a minority that is unrepresentative of the general population, are also observed in samples from other sectors of Mexican society.
比较来自社会经济背景相似的两个女性青少年群体(一个墨西哥群体和一个西班牙群体)中饮食失调(ED)的患病率、社会文化风险因素及身体意象特征。
使用饮食态度测试-26(EAT-26)、CETCA(饮食失调评估问卷)、CIMEC(身体形状模型影响问卷)以及为本研究编制的社会人口统计学和风险因素调查问卷,对467名年龄在11 - 12岁至17 - 18岁之间的西班牙女孩和329名墨西哥女孩进行评估。
四分之一的受试者显示出饮食失调的显著风险,6 - 7%的人可能已经患有饮食失调症。两个样本之间未发现显著差异。在风险行为方面发现了显著差异:更多西班牙女孩表示对身体不满意和暴饮暴食;更多墨西哥女孩有精神和心理治疗史、父母和朋友施加的减肥压力、节食、通过体育活动和呕吐来减肥以及更大幅度的体重减轻史。在两组中,约50%的受试者希望增大胸部尺寸。然而,显著更多的墨西哥女孩希望手臂更细、肩膀和背部更窄,而更多西班牙女孩希望臀部、臀部和腿部更细,而许多墨西哥人希望增大这些身体部位。
这些西班牙和墨西哥青少年女孩的风险行为和理想身体模型存在显著差异,表明存在重大的社会文化差异。然而,饮食失调的患病率相似。进一步的研究应旨在阐明在墨西哥社会其他阶层的样本中是否也能观察到这个西班牙样本与从城市中上阶层环境中选取的墨西哥样本(一个不代表总体人口的少数群体)之间发现的相似之处。