Fatt Scott J, Prnjak Katarina, Buckley Georgina L, George Emma, Hay Phillipa, Jeacocke Nikki, Mitchison Deborah
Translational Health Research Institute, School of Medicine, Western Sydney University, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.
Discipline of Clinical Psychology, Graduate School of Health, University of Technology Sydney, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.
Int J Eat Disord. 2025 Feb;58(2):400-410. doi: 10.1002/eat.24344. Epub 2024 Dec 4.
Elite athletes experience unique pressures and cognitions associated with disordered eating, which may not be appropriately captured by existing tools. The Athletic Disordered Eating (ADE) scale is a recently developed and first measure of disordered eating specifically developed and validated in current and former athletes. This study aimed to provide further validation for the ADE in an independent sample of elite athletes.
Participants were 237 elite athletes (M = 26.1, SD = 8.6; 75.9% female; 73.0% current athletes) participating in various sports across Australia and the United States. Participants completed an online survey including the ADE, demographic questions, and other measures of eating disorder symptoms (Eating Disorder Examination-Questionnaire Short-form, Clinical Impairment Assessment), and related constructs. Twenty-five athletes also completed a clinical interview to determine eating disorder caseness.
The four-factor structure of the ADE from the original validation was confirmed. Further, the ADE demonstrated adequate measurement invariance across male and female current and former athletes; internal consistency for the total score and each subscale; convergent and discriminant validity; and criterion-related validity-with a score of 40 balancing sensitivity and specificity against other scales with established cut-offs for a likely eating disorder. The high-risk cut-off (ADE ≥ 33) had high sensitivity but low specificity in identifying eating disorder cases, as confirmed by the clinical interview.
The ADE is a low-time-burden screening tool for disordered eating, validated in independent samples of diverse athletes. It should be considered for future use in screening, early identification, and monitoring treatment progress in elite athletes.
精英运动员面临与饮食失调相关的独特压力和认知,现有工具可能无法准确捕捉这些情况。运动性饮食失调(ADE)量表是最近开发的首个专门针对现役和退役运动员饮食失调情况进行开发和验证的测量工具。本研究旨在对独立样本的精英运动员进一步验证ADE量表。
参与者为237名精英运动员(平均年龄M = 26.1岁,标准差SD = 8.6岁;75.9%为女性;73.0%为现役运动员),他们来自澳大利亚和美国,参加各种运动项目。参与者完成了一项在线调查,包括ADE量表、人口统计学问题以及饮食失调症状的其他测量指标(饮食失调检查问卷简版、临床损害评估)和相关构念。25名运动员还完成了一次临床访谈以确定饮食失调病例情况。
原始验证中的ADE量表四因素结构得到确认。此外,ADE量表在现役和退役的男性及女性运动员中表现出足够的测量不变性;总分及各子量表的内部一致性;收敛效度和区分效度;以及与标准相关的效度——得分为40时,在敏感性和特异性之间取得平衡,与其他已确定饮食失调临界值的量表相比表现良好。临床访谈证实,高风险临界值(ADE≥33)在识别饮食失调病例时具有高敏感性但低特异性。
ADE量表是一种低时间负担的饮食失调筛查工具,已在不同运动员的独立样本中得到验证。应考虑在未来用于精英运动员的筛查、早期识别和监测治疗进展。