Close X
Tuesday, November 26, 2024
ADVT 
Health

Money Problems Tied To Eating Disorders In Women

Darpan News Desk IANS, 17 Feb, 2015 12:45 PM
    Experiencing financial difficulties at university may increase the risk of developing an eating disorder among female students, a research has found.
     
    Conversely, the study also found that having extreme attitudes to food and eating, such as feeling guilty after eating predicted short-term financial difficulties for female students, suggesting the possibility of a 'vicious cycle' occurring.
     
    "There may be a vicious cycle' for these students, where negative attitudes towards eating increase the risk of financial difficulties in the short term, and those difficulties further exacerbate negative eating attitudes in the longer term," said lead author of the study Thomas Richardson from University of Southampton.
     
    "It may be that those at a higher risk of having an eating disorder feel like they have no control over events in their life, such as their financial situation, and they may then restrict their eating as a way of exercising control in other areas of their life," Richardson said.
     
    The researchers also looked at the relationship between socioeconomic status and eating attitudes. They found a greater persistence of potentially problematic eating attitudes in women from less affluent families.
     
    Over 400 undergraduate students, from universities across Britain, completed surveys assessing family affluence, recent financial difficulties (for example being unable to afford heating or having to borrow money) and attitudes towards food and eating using the Eating Attitudes Test (EAT).
     
    The EAT asks for responses to statements such as 'I feel extremely guilty after eating', 'I am preoccupied with a desire to be thinner', or 'I have the impulse to vomit after meals'.
     
    The results indicated a relationship between financial situation and eating disorders in women, but not in men.
     
    The study was published online in The International Journal of Eating Disorders.

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    'Ebola vaccine showing promising results'

    'Ebola vaccine showing promising results'
    Two Ebola vaccines undergoing clinical trials have shown promising results and would be deployed in January 2015 to West African countries affected by the...

    'Ebola vaccine showing promising results'

    US Institute To Study Sexual Habits Of Obese Girls

    US Institute To Study Sexual Habits Of Obese Girls
    The US National Institute for Health (NIH) has collaborated with researchers from the University of Pittsburgh' Magee-Women's Research Institute to study the sexual habits of obese girls.

    US Institute To Study Sexual Habits Of Obese Girls

    Toy-related Injuries On The Rise In US

    Toy-related Injuries On The Rise In US
    The study highlights that while playing with toys helps children to develop, learn, and explore, parents should also note that many toys pose an injury risk to children.

    Toy-related Injuries On The Rise In US

    Too Many Us Infants Still Sleep With Blankets Or Other Unsafe Bedding

    Too Many Us Infants Still Sleep With Blankets Or Other Unsafe Bedding
    CHICAGO — Too many U.S. infants sleep with blankets, pillows or other unsafe bedding that may lead to suffocation or sudden infant death syndrome, despite guidelines recommending against the practice. That's according to researchers who say 17 years of national data show parents need to be better informed.

    Too Many Us Infants Still Sleep With Blankets Or Other Unsafe Bedding

    Personalised vaccines for cancer a step closer

    Personalised vaccines for cancer a step closer
    Researchers have developed a strategy to create personalised vaccines that spur the immune system to attack harmful tumours....

    Personalised vaccines for cancer a step closer

    'Off switch' for pain discovered

    'Off switch' for pain discovered
    Researchers have uncovered a new way to block neuropathic pain including pain caused by chemotherapeutic agents and bone cancer....

    'Off switch' for pain discovered