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Risk Factors for Binge Eating Disorder: A Community-Based, Case-Control Study

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TLDR
Binge eating disorder appears to be associated with exposure to risk factors for psychiatric disorder and for obesity, and pre-morbid perfectionism, negative self-evaluation, and vulnerability to obesity appear especially to characterize those in whom bulimia nervosa subsequently develops.
Abstract
Background Many risk factors have been implicated for eating disorders, although little is known about those for binge eating disorder. Methods A community-based, case-control design was used to compare 52 women with binge eating disorder, 104 without an eating disorder, 102 with other psychiatric disorders, and 102 with bulimia nervosa. Results The main risk factors identified from the comparison of subjects with binge eating disorder with healthy control subjects were certain adverse childhood experiences, parental depression, vulnerability to obesity, and repeated exposure to negative comments about shape, weight, and eating. Compared with the subjects with other psychiatric disorders, those with binge eating disorder reported more childhood obesity and more exposure to negative comments about shape, weight, and eating. Certain childhood traits and pronounced vulnerability to obesity distinguished the subjects with bulimia nervosa from those with binge eating disorder. Conclusions Binge eating disorder appears to be associated with exposure to risk factors for psychiatric disorder and for obesity. When compared with the wide range of risk factors for bulimia nervosa, the risk factors for binge eating disorder are weaker and more circumscribed. Premorbid perfectionism, negative self-evaluation, and vulnerability to obesity appear especially to characterize those in whom bulimia nervosa subsequently develops.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Coming to Terms With Risk Factors for Eating Disorders: Application of Risk Terminology and Suggestions for a General Taxonomy

TL;DR: Common risk factors from longitudinal and cross-sectional studies were gender, ethnicity, early childhood eating and gastrointestinal problems, elevated weight and shape concerns, negative self-evaluation, sexual abuse and other adverse experiences, and general psychiatric morbidity.
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Stigma, Obesity, and the Health of the Nation's Children

TL;DR: This report reviews existing research on weight stigma in children and adolescents, with attention to the nature and extent of weight bias toward obese youths and to the primary sources of stigma in their lives, including peers, educators, and parents.
Journal ArticleDOI

Clinical perfectionism: a cognitive-behavioural analysis.

TL;DR: The characteristics of clinical perfectionism are reviewed and a new definition of the phenomenon is proposed, suggesting that people with perfectionism react to failure to meet their standards with self-criticism and if they do meet their Standards, the standards are re-evaluated as being insufficiently demanding.
Journal ArticleDOI

Associations of Weight-Based Teasing and Emotional Well-being Among Adolescents

TL;DR: Teasing about body weight was consistently associated with low body satisfaction, low self-esteem, high depressive symptoms, and thinking about and attempting suicide, even after controlling for actual body weight.
Journal ArticleDOI

Are Mood Disorders and Obesity Related? A Review for the Mental Health Professional

TL;DR: Although the overlap between mood disorders and obesity may be coincidental, it suggests the two conditions may be related.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Assessment of eating disorders: Interview or self‐report questionnaire?

TL;DR: Although the two measures performed similarly with respect to the assessment of unambiguous behavioral features such as self-induced vomiting and dieting, the self-report questionnaire generated higher scores than the interview when assessing more complex featuressuch as binge eating and concerns about shape.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-III-R (SCID). I: History, rationale, and description.

TL;DR: The history, rationale, and development of the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-III-R (SCID) is described, which is a semistructured interview for making the major Axis I DSM- III-R diagnoses.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Parental Bonding Instrument

TL;DR: The Maudsley Obsessional-Compulsive Inventory (OCI) and Leyton Obsessionality Inventory (LOI) were used by as discussed by the authors to assess perceived levels of parental care and overprotection.
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