2007
DOI: 10.1002/eat.20400
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Risk factors for binge‐eating disorders: An exploratory study

Abstract: Our findings suggest that eating disorders may have multiple and complex etiologies. This is the first study to suggest that elevated levels of perceived stress may precede the onset of binge-eating disorders. Whether this is a causal association remains a question.

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Cited by 68 publications
(45 citation statements)
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“…A Swedish study (Engstrom & Norring, 2001) of an adolescent sample found that living alone, moving away from home early and the experience of bullying was associated with an increase of overeating. Similarly, a recent study of American women (Striegel-Moore et al 2007) identified elevated levels of perceived stress as being associated with lifetime disorders where OBE were present. A study of American adolescent girls (Stice et al 2002) showed that growth in OBE was predicted by elevated dieting, pressure to be thin, modelling of eating disturbances, appearance over-evaluation, body dissatisfaction, depressive symptoms, emotional eating, higher body mass index (BMI) and low levels of self-esteem and social support.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 88%
“…A Swedish study (Engstrom & Norring, 2001) of an adolescent sample found that living alone, moving away from home early and the experience of bullying was associated with an increase of overeating. Similarly, a recent study of American women (Striegel-Moore et al 2007) identified elevated levels of perceived stress as being associated with lifetime disorders where OBE were present. A study of American adolescent girls (Stice et al 2002) showed that growth in OBE was predicted by elevated dieting, pressure to be thin, modelling of eating disturbances, appearance over-evaluation, body dissatisfaction, depressive symptoms, emotional eating, higher body mass index (BMI) and low levels of self-esteem and social support.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 88%
“…In regard to childhood stressors, teasing and bullying have been shown to function as vulnerability factors for both anxiety and eating disorders. 31 Proximal factors, such as recent experiences of perceived stress or stressful life events, [95][96][97][98][99] may also relate to the development of both anxiety and eating disorders. Research suggests a shared course for emotional distress and features of binge eating.…”
Section: Shared Vulnerability Factorsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Inną przyczyną jest uszkodzenie ośrodka sytości leżącego w brzuszno--przyśrodkowej części podwzgórza [10]. Doniesienia naukowe wskazują też na wpływ zaburzeń neurochemicznych, nieprawidłowe interakcje czynników hormonalnych i metabolicznych z neuroregulacyjnymi mechanizmami w obrębie ośrodkowego układu nerwowego [11].…”
Section: Celunclassified
“…Emocje związane z trudnymi doświad-czeniami (np. wczesna separacja, problemy w kontaktach interpersonalnych) mogą wyzwalać epizody objadania się [10]. Szczególne znaczenie mają relacje z osobami znaczą-cymi oraz dysfunkcjonalne rodzicielstwo.…”
Section: Celunclassified
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