This article describes a 10-year longitudinal study of eating attitudes and behaviors. A sample of 509 women and 206 men completed a detailed survey in 1982 while they were in college. The authors contacted participants 10 years later and administered a 2nd questionnaire to assess stability and change in eating behaviors that occurred during the transition to early adulthood. Women in the study had substantial declines in disordered eating behavior as well as increased body satisfaction. However, body dissatisfaction and desires to lose weight remained at relatively high levels. Men, who rarely dieted or had eating problems in college, were prone to weight gain following college, and many of them reported increased dieting or disordered eating. The authors conclude that disordered eating generally tends to decline during the transition to early adulthood. However, body dissatisfaction remains a problem for a substantial segment of the adult population.Although disordered and chaotic eating behaviors are common among young women, relatively little is known about the natural course or progression of these eating problems over time. A substantial number of young girls begin dieting before adolescence, and by the time they are in high school many of them have become chronic dieters (Heatherton & Polivy, 1992;Rosen & Gross, 1987). Moreover, many young women engage in a variety of disordered eating behaviors, such as binge eating or purging (Leon, Fulkerson, Peny & Cudeck, 1993). Likewise, eating disorders are especially prevalent during adolescence and early adulthood, with the most common onset reported to occur around age 18 (Thelen, Mann, Pruitt, & Smith, 1987). Thus,
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