Cordero Elizabeth D, Israel Tania
Department of Counseling, Clinical & School Psychology, University of California, Santa Barbara, California, USA.
Eat Disord. 2009 Mar-Apr;17(2):146-61. doi: 10.1080/10640260802714639.
This study examined how parents can protect their college-aged daughters from disordered eating. Specifically, the influence of the following variables on disordered eating was investigated: parental emotional availability and acceptance, parents' critical messages about weight and shape, acceptance of sociocultural attitudes about appearance, self-esteem, and early menarche. Participants included a random sample of 211 female undergraduates who completed an Internet questionnaire. Using multiple regression, messages heard from mothers and fathers were found to contribute to disordered eating, and sociocultural attitudes acted as a mediator for the effects of mothers' and fathers' messages on disordered eating. Implications are discussed.
本研究探讨了父母如何保护他们上大学的女儿避免饮食失调。具体而言,研究调查了以下变量对饮食失调的影响:父母的情感支持与接纳、父母关于体重和体型的批评性信息、对社会文化外貌态度的接纳、自尊以及初潮过早。参与者包括211名完成网络问卷的本科女生随机样本。通过多元回归分析发现,从母亲和父亲那里听到的信息会导致饮食失调,并且社会文化态度在母亲和父亲的信息对饮食失调的影响中起到了中介作用。文中还讨论了相关启示。