Determinants of adolescent obesity: a comparison with anorexia nervosa |
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Authors: | R J Brone C B Fisher |
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Affiliation: | Graduate Program in Developmental Psychology, Fordham University, Bronx, New York 10458. |
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Abstract: | This report investigates childhood and adolescent obesity through a comparison with anorexia nervosa, an eating disorder typically associated with the opposite end of the eating behavior spectrum. Many similarities in the etiologies of the two conditions are discussed, particularly with regard to the influence of family interactional patterns. More specifically, it appears that the families of both anorexics and the obese are characterized by overprotectiveness and enmeshment, resulting in a poor sense of identity and effectiveness. Such children, usually compliant and dependent in childhood, misuse the eating function in an attempt to assert their independence and gain control of their lives in adolescence. According to the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-III-R), anorexia nervosa, but not obesity, meets the definition of an eating disorder. Although it appears that DSM-III-R is accurate in not classifying obesity as an eating disorder, it is important to keep the etiological similarities of the two conditions in mind when treating obesity. |
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