The Virginia Consortium Program in Clinical Psychology, Norfolk, Virginia, USA.
Department of Health Law Policy and Management, Boston University School of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
Int J Eat Disord. 2022 Jun;55(6):776-789. doi: 10.1002/eat.23709. Epub 2022 Mar 26.
The present study aimed to: (1) identify recent temporal changes in the prevalence of different cognitive and behavioral eating disorder (ED) symptoms, current probable EDs, lifetime ED diagnoses, and mental healthcare use among college students across the United States; (2) determine whether established disparities in ED prevalence and receiving mental healthcare have widened or narrowed over time for marginalized groups within this population.
Participants included a large national sample of U.S. college students (N = 286,720) who completed the repeated cross-sectional Healthy Minds Study from 2013 to 2020. Descriptive statistics and polynomial regressions quantified time-trends in participants' ED symptoms and past 12-month mental healthcare. Moderated regressions examined temporal changes in ED symptoms and mental healthcare based on sociodemographic characteristics.
Individuals' engagement in different cognitive and behavioral ED symptoms, and likelihoods of exhibiting current probable EDs, reporting lifetime ED diagnoses, and (for individuals with current probable EDs) receiving therapy or counseling in the past 12-months exhibited nonlinear increases from 2013 to 2020. Further, the prevalence of current and lifetime ED symptoms and (for symptomatic individuals) past 12-month mental healthcare differed over time for individuals with different BMIs and gender, sexual, and racial/ethnic identities (but not ages). In particular, individuals with higher BMIs and those who identified as male, bisexual, and gay, lesbian, or queer exhibited increasing ED pathology over time.
These findings provide important information on groups of U.S. college students that have experienced increasing burden of ED symptoms and may help guide ED prevention, treatment, and research priorities.
Recent temporal changes in the prevalence of eating disorder (ED) symptoms and mental healthcare were examined in a national sample of U.S. young adults. Non-linear increases in ED symptoms and mental healthcare were identified among U.S. young adults overall from 2013 to 2020. U.S. young adults with higher BMIs, males, bisexual, and gay, lesbian, or queer individuals exhibited increasing ED burden over time.
本研究旨在:(1) 确定美国大学生中不同认知和行为性饮食障碍(ED)症状、当前可能的 ED、终生 ED 诊断以及精神保健服务使用的流行率的近期时间变化;(2) 确定在该人群中,边缘化群体的 ED 流行率和获得精神保健服务方面的既定差距是否随着时间的推移而扩大或缩小。
参与者包括来自美国的一个大型全国性大学生样本(N=286720 人),他们在 2013 年至 2020 年期间完成了反复的横断面健康思维研究。描述性统计和多项式回归量化了参与者 ED 症状和过去 12 个月精神保健服务的时间趋势。基于社会人口统计学特征的调节回归检验了 ED 症状和精神保健服务的时间变化。
个体参与不同的认知和行为性 ED 症状,以及表现出现今可能的 ED、报告终生 ED 诊断的可能性,以及(对于现今可能的 ED 个体)在过去 12 个月内接受治疗或咨询的可能性,从 2013 年到 2020 年呈非线性增加。此外,对于具有不同 BMI 和性别、性和种族/民族认同的个体(但不是年龄),现今和终生 ED 症状的流行率以及(对于有症状的个体)过去 12 个月的精神保健服务存在时间差异。特别是,BMI 较高的个体以及男性、双性恋和同性恋、女同性恋或酷儿个体的 ED 病理随时间推移而增加。
这些发现提供了有关美国大学生群体的重要信息,这些群体经历了 ED 症状负担的增加,这可能有助于指导 ED 预防、治疗和研究重点。
本研究在一个全国性的美国年轻成年人样本中检查了 ED 症状和精神保健服务的近期时间变化。从 2013 年到 2020 年,总体上美国年轻成年人的 ED 症状和精神保健服务呈非线性增加。随着时间的推移,BMI 较高的美国年轻成年人、男性、双性恋和同性恋、女同性恋或酷儿个体的 ED 负担不断增加。