“…Two key exceptions in Asia included Japan, where eating disorders began emerging in the late1970s (Pike & Borovoy, 2004), and Hong Kong, where case reports of eating disordered patients were documented in the 1980s (Lee, 1993;Steiger, 1995). Since 1990, however, reports of eating disorders in other Asian countries, including Singapore, Korea, Taiwan, China, Fiji, Malaysia, and India, have steadily increased (Chandra et al, 1995;Gordon, 2001;Hoek & van Hoeken, 2003;Lee, 1998Lee, , 2004Ong, Tsoi, & Cheah, 1982;Tsai, 2000;Ung, 2003) Consistent with trends in the West, the prevalence of eating disorders rose sharply in Japan before levelling off in recent years (Pike & Borovoy, 2004;Yasuhara et al, 2002), and rates of eating disorders are believed to have increased in several other countries such as Singapore (Ung, Lee, & Kua, 1997), Korea (Jackson, Keel, & Lee, 2006), China (Chen & Jackson, 2008), and Taiwan (Tsai, Chang, Lien, & Wong, 2011;Yeh et al, 2009). Notably, more recent data suggest that eating disorder rates in Japan are now on par with those in the West (Pike, Yamamiya, & Konishi, 2011), while in other countries in which the prevalence is still thought to be lower than in the West, reports of antecedent factors such as body dissatisfaction and dieting/weight-control behaviours continue to climb (Jung & Forbes, 2007;Jung, Forbes, & Lee, 2009;Tsai, Curbow, & Heinberg, 2003;Xu et al, 2010).…”