Department of Psychology, Florida State University, Tallahassee, Florida 32306, USA.
Int J Eat Disord. 2013 Jul;46(5):433-9. doi: 10.1002/eat.22094.
One goal in identifying psychosocial risk factors is to discover opportunities for intervention. The purpose of this review is to examine psychosocial risk factors for disordered eating, placing research findings in the larger context of how etiological models for eating disorders can be transformed into models for intervention.
A qualitative literature review was conducted focusing on psychological and social factors that increase the risk for developing eating disorders, with an emphasis on well-replicated findings from prospective longitudinal studies.
Epidemiological, cross-cultural, and longitudinal studies underscore the importance of the idealization of thinness and resulting weight concerns as psychosocial risk factors for eating disorders. Personality factors such as negative emotionality and perfectionism contribute to the development of eating disorders but may do so indirectly by increasing susceptibility to internalize the thin ideal or by influencing selection of peer environment. During adolescence, peers represent self-selected environments that influence risk.
Peer context may represent a key opportunity for intervention, as peer groups represent the nexus in which individual differences in psychological risk factors shape the social environment and social environment shapes psychological risk factors. Thus, peer-based interventions that challenge internalization of the thin ideal can protect against the development of eating pathology.
识别心理社会风险因素的一个目标是发现干预的机会。本综述的目的是探讨饮食失调的心理社会风险因素,并将研究结果置于如何将饮食失调的病因学模型转化为干预模型的更大背景下。
进行了定性文献综述,重点关注增加饮食失调风险的心理和社会因素,特别强调前瞻性纵向研究中得到充分证实的发现。
流行病学、跨文化和纵向研究强调了将消瘦理想化和由此产生的体重问题作为饮食失调的心理社会风险因素的重要性。个性因素,如负性情绪和完美主义,有助于饮食失调的发展,但可能是通过增加内化消瘦理想的易感性或通过影响同伴环境的选择间接这样做。在青春期,同伴代表自我选择的环境,影响风险。
同伴环境可能代表着干预的一个关键机会,因为同伴群体代表了个体心理风险因素塑造社会环境和社会环境塑造心理风险因素的交点。因此,基于同伴的干预措施可以挑战内化消瘦理想,从而预防饮食失调的发生。