Summary
In “Risk factors for binge eating and purging eating disorders: Differences Based on Age of Onset,” Allen, Byrne, Oddy, et al (2014) use a logical regression method to determine relationships between various psychological and environmental variables and age of onset of eating disorders. The authors explain the importance of the study in clarifying and detecting risk factors, with clear implications for clinical practice. According to the authors, this study fills a gap in the literature not just in that it is a single cohort design but also one that uses a psychiatric control group. The main variables include parent perceptions of their child’s weight, and also actual body weight in middle childhood. The authors present two hypotheses: first, that among female cohorts, late-onset binge-and-purge eating disorders like bulimia would be positively correlated with parental disapproval of child weight in middle childhood. Second, the authors hypothesize that early adolescents’ concerns about weight, eating, or shape would be more correlated with late onset eating disorders than any other childhood variable.
The authors attempt to address a cluster of intervening variables at the same time, including comorbic psychiatric conditions like anxiety or depression. Using the Raine Study model, the authors assessed childhood variables including early...
References
Allen, K.L., Byrne, S.M., Oddy, W.H., et al (2014). Risk factors for binge eating and purging eating disorders. Int J Eat Disord 2014; 47:802–812
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