Behavioral symptoms of eating disorders in Native Americans: Results from the add health survey wave III

Citation

Striegel-Moore, Ruth H.; Rosselli, Francine; Holtzman, Niki; Dierker, Lisa; Becker, Anne E.; & Swaney, Gyda (2011). Behavioral symptoms of eating disorders in Native Americans: Results from the add health survey wave III. International Journal of Eating Disorders. vol. 44 (6) pp. 561-566

Abstract

Objective:
To examine prevalence and correlates (gender, Body Mass Index) of disordered eating in American Indian/Native American (AI/NA) and white young adults.
Method:
We examined data from the 10,334 participants (mean age 21.93 years, SD = 1.8) of the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health (ADD Health) Wave III for gender differences among AI/NA participants (236 women, 253 men) and ethnic group differences on measures of eating pathology.
Results:
Among AI/NA groups, women were significantly more likely than men to report loss of control and embarrassment due to overeating. In gender-stratified analyses, a significantly higher prevalence of AI/NA women reported disordered eating behaviors compared with white women; there were no between group differences in prevalence for breakfast skipping or having been diagnosed with an eating disorder. Among men, disordered eating behaviors were uncommon and no comparison was statistically significant.
Discussion:
Our study offers a first glimpse into the problem of eating pathology among AI/NA individuals. Gender differences among AI/NA participants are similar to results reported in white samples. That AI/NA women were as likely as white women to have been diagnosed with an eating disorder is striking in light of well documented under-utilization of mental health care among AI/NA individuals.

URL

http://dx.doi.org/10.1002%2Feat.20894

Keyword(s)

Eating disorder

Reference Type

Journal Article

Journal Title

International Journal of Eating Disorders

Author(s)

Striegel-Moore, Ruth H.
Rosselli, Francine
Holtzman, Niki
Dierker, Lisa
Becker, Anne E.
Swaney, Gyda

Year Published

2011

Volume Number

44

Issue Number

6

Pages

561-566

DOI

10.1002/eat.20894

Reference ID

1444