Wonderful Women Wednesday: Size Zero Fuels Eating Disorders
A leading British eating disorder expert, Professor Janet Treasure from the Institute of Psychiatry, King’s College London, reports that the size zero obsession in the fashion industry is fueling the flames for those with eating disorders. She says the size zero obsession is not only damaging to the public but to the models as well.
Professor Treasure says ‘famine then feast’ is an eating disorder where a cycle is set up when a diet is broken by the attraction of highly palatable foods, and a pattern known as “binge priming” begins.
Professor Treasure says studies on animals, which simulated periods of self-denial followed by exposure to highly palatable foods, led to binge eating and to a susceptibility to addictive behaviours - after a period of food restriction, when animals are intermittently exposed to highly palatable food, they significantly overeat.
She says this pattern continues when their weight is restored and the tendency to over consume or ‘binge’ when exposed to highly palatable foods remains several months after the period of binge priming.
She says this pattern continues when their weight is restored and the tendency to over consume or ‘binge’ when exposed to highly palatable foods remains several months after the period of binge priming.
In humans binge priming caused by irregular dieting and/or extreme food restriction, interspersed with intermittent consumption of snacks and other highly palatable food, might lead in adolescence to persistent eating problems.
Professor Treasure says people exposed to binge priming may also be more prone to substance misuse.
Researchers Elizabeth Wack and Marion Roberts say models were put at serious risk because of the culture of thinness in the fashion industry which possibly explains the increase in eating disorders seen in women born in the last half of the 20th century and may also contribute to the increase in obesity.
The researchers have called for a greater focus on reducing obsessive dieting and poor eating habits among young people.
A size-zero indicates a 22in waist the same as the average eight-year-old.
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