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Journal Article

Citation

Pisetsky EM, May Chao Y, Dierker LC, May AM, Striegel-Moore RH. Int. J. Eat. Disord. 2008; 41(5): 464-470.

Affiliation

Department of Psychology, Wesleyan University, Middletown, Connecticut, USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2008, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1002/eat.20520

PMID

18348283

Abstract

OBJECTIVE:: To examine the association between disordered eating (fasting, diet product use, and vomiting or laxative use) and use of 10 substances (cigarettes, alcohol, marijuana, cocaine, inhalants, heroin, methamphetamines, ecstasy, steroids, and hallucinogens) in a nationally representative adolescent sample. METHOD:: Participants were 13,917 U.S. high-school students participating in the 2005 Youth Risk Behavior Surveillance System. RESULTS:: Disordered eating was significantly associated with the use of each substance. Using effect size estimates that take base rates into consideration, for female students, associations between substance use and disordered eating were weak for all but three forms of substance use: current smoking, binge drinking, and inhalants. Among male students, strong (marijuana, steroids, and inhalants) or moderate effects (all other substances) were observed. CONCLUSION:: Future research needs to focus on inhalant use and methamphetamine use in males. Increased medical attention should be directed toward adolescents who practice disordered eating behaviors because they are also at elevated risk for using cigarettes, alcohol, inhalants, methamphetamines, and steroids.

Language: en

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