Izydorczyk Bernadetta, Sitnik-Warchulska Katarzyna
Institute of Applied Psychology, Jagiellonian University, Kraków, Poland.
Front Psychol. 2018 Mar 29;9:429. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2018.00429. eCollection 2018.
The main aim of the present study was to verify the level of impact of sociocultural appearance standards (passive awareness and active internalization) have on body dissatisfaction, the desire to engage in a relentless pursuit of thinness, the adoption of a perfectionistic attitude toward the body, and the development of a tendency to engage in bulimic eating behavior, which can develop in adolescent girls and women of varying ages. The study group comprised 234 individuals: 95 secondary school girls, 33 high school girls, 56 female students, and 50 employed women, all of whom were living in southern Poland. Participants were not diagnosed with any psychiatric disorders (including eating disorders). The variables were measured using the Polish version of Garner's Eating Disorder Inventory and the Polish Sociocultural Attitudes Towards Physical Appearance and Body Image Inventory [based on the SATAQ-3 (Sociocultural Attitudes Towards Appearance Questionnaire Scale-3)]. The findings revealed that the youngest Polish girls (aged 12-15) reported the highest level of risk factors for eating disorders. Among the entire study group, the internalization of appearance standards and the pressure associated with various media messages were determined to be predictors of the pursuit of thinness, regardless of age and body mass index values. The second most significant variable explained by the internalization of sociocultural standards was body dissatisfaction. The internalization of sociocultural norms provided a significant explanation of bulimic tendencies only in the youngest girls. Perfectionism proved not to be affected by the sociocultural impact of mass media. The adult women had the lowest average scores over the entire study population regarding exposure frequency to body images in mass media and regarding the experience of pressure exerted by sociocultural norms. The high level of internalization of sociocultural appearance standards seems to be significantly linked to body satisfaction in women aged 30 and older. Young adolescent girls constitute a high-risk group for a specific psychological proneness to developing eating disorders as a result of the sociocultural influence exerted by mass media. The obtained study results can prove helpful in creating education programs in preventive healthcare aimed particularly at the youngest adolescents.
本研究的主要目的是验证社会文化外表标准(被动意识和主动内化)对身体不满、追求极致瘦身的欲望、对身体采取完美主义态度以及发展为暴食饮食行为倾向的影响程度,这些情况可能出现在不同年龄段的青春期女孩和女性身上。研究组包括234人:95名中学女生、33名高中女生、56名女大学生和50名职业女性,她们均生活在波兰南部。参与者未被诊断出患有任何精神疾病(包括饮食失调症)。使用加纳饮食失调量表的波兰语版本以及波兰社会文化对外表和身体形象的态度量表[基于SATAQ - 3(社会文化对外表的态度问卷量表 - 3)]对变量进行测量。研究结果显示,最年轻的波兰女孩(12 - 15岁)报告的饮食失调风险因素水平最高。在整个研究组中,无论年龄和体重指数值如何,外表标准的内化以及与各种媒体信息相关的压力被确定为追求瘦身的预测因素。社会文化标准内化所解释的第二大显著变量是身体不满。社会文化规范的内化仅在最年轻的女孩中对暴食倾向提供了显著解释。事实证明,完美主义不受大众媒体社会文化影响的影响。在整个研究人群中,成年女性在大众媒体中接触身体形象的频率以及社会文化规范施加压力的体验方面的平均得分最低。社会文化外表标准的高度内化似乎与30岁及以上女性的身体满意度显著相关。由于大众媒体施加的社会文化影响,年轻的青春期女孩构成了因特定心理倾向而发展为饮食失调症的高风险群体。所获得的研究结果可能有助于创建预防保健教育项目,特别是针对最年轻的青少年。