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Identifying disordered eating behaviours in adolescents: how do parent and adolescent reports differ by sex and age?

Savani BartholdyKarina AllenJohn HodsollOwen G O'DalyIain C CampbellTobias BanaschewskiArun L W BokdeUli BrombergChristian BüchelErin Burke QuinlanPatricia J ConrodSylvane DesrivièresHerta FlorVincent FrouinJürgen GallinatHugh GaravanAndreas HeinzBernd IttermannJean-Luc MartinotEric ArtigesFrauke NeesDimitri Papadopoulos OrfanosTomáš PausLuise PoustkaMichael N SmolkaEva MennigenHenrik WalterRobert WhelanGunter SchumannUlrike Schmidt
Published in: European child & adolescent psychiatry (2017)
This study investigated the prevalence of disordered eating cognitions and behaviours across mid-adolescence in a large European sample, and explored the extent to which prevalence ratings were affected by informant (parent/adolescent), or the sex or age of the adolescent. The Development and Well-Being Assessment was completed by parent-adolescent dyads at age 14 (n = 2225) and again at age 16 (n = 1607) to explore the prevalence of 7 eating disorder symptoms (binge eating, purging, fear of weight gain, distress over shape/weight, avoidance of fattening foods, food restriction, and exercise for weight loss). Informant agreement was assessed using kappa coefficients. Generalised estimating equations were performed to explore the impact of age, sex and informant on symptom prevalence. Slight to fair agreement was observed between parent and adolescent reports (kappa estimates between 0.045 and 0.318); however, this was largely driven by agreement on the absence of behaviours. Disordered eating behaviours were more consistently endorsed amongst girls compared to boys (odds ratios: 2.96-5.90) and by adolescents compared to their parents (odds ratios: 2.71-9.05). Our data are consistent with previous findings in epidemiological studies. The findings suggest that sex-related differences in the prevalence of disordered eating behaviour are established by mid-adolescence. The greater prevalence rates obtained from adolescent compared to parent reports may be due to the secretive nature of the behaviours and/or lack of awareness by parents. If adolescent reports are overlooked, the disordered behaviour may have a greater opportunity to become more entrenched.
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