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考察美国退伍军人中暴食和 binge-eating 行为的临床相关性。

Examining the Clinical Correlates of Overeating and Binge-Eating Behaviors Among U. S.  Veterans.

机构信息

Department of Psychology, University of Nevada, Las Vegas, NV 89154-5030, USA.

VISN 1 New England MIRECC, Bedford Healthcare System, Bedford, MA 01730, USA.

出版信息

Mil Med. 2022 Mar 28;187(3-4):297-303. doi: 10.1093/milmed/usab533.

Abstract

INTRODUCTION

Pressure to meet U.S. military weight requirements during service may predispose some service members to develop psychiatric disorders such as eating disorders or unhealthy eating behaviors, which may persist after military discharge. Specifically, research examining U.S. military veterans has found that in weight management programs, veterans with binge-eating behaviors have shown poor treatment outcomes. Overall, previous research suggests that veterans experience considerable and persistent disordered eating problems, and in addition may experience a higher prevalence of disordered eating in comparison to the general U.S. population. Research on Post-9/11 Operation Enduring Freedom/Operation Iraqi Freedom/Operation New Dawn (OEF/OIF/OND) veterans is needed as this group frequently presents with high rates of medical and psychiatric disorders. The current study used clinician-administered structured interviews to examine relationships between psychiatric, health, and demographic variables in a sample of Post-9/11 OEF/OIF/OND veterans with binge-eating or overeating behavior or neither.

MATERIALS AND METHODS

This article presents secondary analyses of the baseline phase from data obtained for the Survey of the Experiences of Returning Veterans. Using structured phone interviews, we cross-sectionally examined patterns of medical comorbidities between sociodemographic, health, eating, and psychiatric variables in 846 recently deployed U.S. veterans with binge-eating behaviors (reporting both overeating and loss of control [LOC] eating), overeating behaviors (overeating without LOC), or healthy controls (absence of any disordered eating). Study procedures were approved by the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) Institutional Review Boards, and informed consent was obtained from the participants. A series of chi-square and analysis of variance tests revealed significant bivariate between-group differences in sociodemographic, health, eating, and psychiatric variables. Variables with significant group differences (P < .05) were entered into a multinomial logistic regression to examine relationships between psychiatric, health, and eating factors and binge-eating severity.

RESULTS

Results of the multinomial logistic regression analysis showed that women relative to men were less likely to overeat. When comparing the binge-eating group and controls, higher body mass index was associated with higher odds of binge eating. Furthermore, for the overeating group in comparison to controls, fasting behavior was associated with higher odds of overeating. For the psychiatric variables, the binge-eating and overeating groups were associated with higher rates of compulsive buying when compared to healthy controls. Additionally, the overeating group was associated with higher rates of alcohol dependence. Lastly, binge-eating and overeating behaviors were positively associated with specific psychiatric and health comorbidities.

CONCLUSIONS

Further research is needed to inform the development of effective treatments for disordered eating problems, as evidenced by an anticipated increase of veterans entering the VA healthcare system and the high rate of binge eating observed in our study and prior research in Post-9/11 veterans. Moreover, our study findings suggest the relevance of screening veterans for compulsive buying. This study was limited by its relatively small sample which only examined disordered eating behaviors. Future studies could simultaneously explore binge-eating behaviors and binge-eating disorder diagnoses in larger samples. Study strengths include a diverse sample of Post-9/11 veterans with sizable female representation.

摘要

简介

在服役期间,为了达到美国军队的体重要求,一些军人可能会更容易出现精神障碍,如饮食失调或不健康的饮食习惯,而这些问题可能会在退伍后持续存在。具体来说,研究发现,在美国军队退伍军人的体重管理计划中,有暴食行为的退伍军人治疗效果较差。总的来说,先前的研究表明,退伍军人经历了相当多且持续的饮食失调问题,并且与普通美国人群相比,他们可能更容易出现饮食失调。因此,需要对 9/11 后“持久自由行动”/“伊拉克自由行动”/“新黎明行动”(OEF/OIF/OND)的退伍军人进行研究,因为这群人经常表现出较高的医疗和精神障碍发病率。本研究使用临床医生管理的结构化访谈,在有暴食或暴饮暴食行为或两者都没有的 9/11 后 OEF/OIF/OND 退伍军人样本中,检查了精神、健康和人口统计学变量之间的关系。

材料与方法

本文对退伍军人经验调查中获得的基线阶段数据进行了二次分析。使用结构化电话访谈,我们在 846 名最近部署的美国退伍军人中,横截面对有暴食行为(报告暴食和失去控制[LOC]饮食)、暴饮暴食行为(无 LOC 饮食)或健康对照组之间的医学合并症与社会人口统计学、健康、饮食和精神变量之间的模式进行了检查。研究程序得到了退伍军人事务部(VA)机构审查委员会的批准,并从参与者那里获得了知情同意。一系列卡方和方差分析检验显示,社会人口统计学、健康、饮食和精神变量之间存在显著的组间差异。具有显著组间差异的变量(P<.05)被纳入多变量逻辑回归,以检查精神、健康和饮食因素与暴食严重程度之间的关系。

结果

多变量逻辑回归分析的结果表明,与男性相比,女性不太可能暴饮暴食。当将暴食组与对照组进行比较时,较高的体重指数与暴食的几率较高有关。此外,与对照组相比,禁食行为与暴饮暴食的几率较高有关。对于精神变量,暴食组和暴饮暴食组与健康对照组相比,强迫性购买的发生率更高。此外,暴饮暴食组与酒精依赖的发生率更高。最后,暴食和暴饮暴食行为与特定的精神和健康合并症呈正相关。

结论

需要进一步的研究来为饮食失调问题的治疗提供信息,这是退伍军人进入退伍军人事务部医疗系统的预期增加以及我们的研究和之前的研究中观察到的暴食率高所证明的。此外,我们的研究结果表明,对退伍军人进行强迫性购买筛查具有相关性。本研究的局限性在于其样本相对较小,仅检查了饮食失调行为。未来的研究可以同时在更大的样本中探索暴食行为和暴食障碍的诊断。该研究的优势包括具有大量女性代表性的多样化的 9/11 后退伍军人样本。

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