An attempt to modify unhealthful eating attitudes and weight regulation practices of young adolescent girls

This is the first long-term, controlled study evaluating the effectiveness of a prevention curriculum designed to modify the eating attitudes and unhealthful weight regulation practices of young adolescent girls. Nine hundred sixty-seven sixth and seventh-grade girls were randomized to experimental...

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Veröffentlicht in:The International journal of eating disorders 1993-05, Vol.13 (4), p.369-384
Hauptverfasser: Killen, J.D. (National Institute of Child Health and Human Development), Taylor, C.B, Hammer, L.D, Litt, I, Wilson, D.M, Rich, T, Hayward, C, Simmonds, B, Kraemer, H, Varady, A
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:This is the first long-term, controlled study evaluating the effectiveness of a prevention curriculum designed to modify the eating attitudes and unhealthful weight regulation practices of young adolescent girls. Nine hundred sixty-seven sixth and seventh-grade girls were randomized to experimental healthy weight regulation curriculum or no-treatment control classes. A prevention intervention was developed around three principal components: (1) Instruction on the harmful effects of unhealthful weight regulation; (2) promotion of healthful weight regulation through the practice of sound nutrition and dietary principles and regular aerobic physical activity; (3) development of coping skills for resisting the diverse sociocultural influences that appear linked to the current popular obsessions with thinness and dieting. The intervention failed to achieve the hoped-for impact. We did observe a significant increase in knowledge among girls receiving the intervention and among high-risk students only, there was a small albeit statistically significant effect on body mass index. These findings question the wisdom of providing a curriculum directed at all young adolescents, most of whom are not at risk to develop an eating disorder. Rather than targeting the entire population, a healthy weight curriculum designed to modify the eating attitudes and unhealthful weight regulation practices of young adolescent girls might better focus on "at risk" students
ISSN:0276-3478
1098-108X
DOI:10.1002/1098-108X(199305)13:4<369::AID-EAT2260130405>3.0.CO;2-0