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Middle School Girls: Sports Participation and Eating Disorders
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Given concerns that older adolescent females engage in dieting extremes and excessive exercise to control weight or body shape, this study explored sports participation, weight perceptions, and eating beliefs and practices among a group of middle school girls. Students (n=256) in grades five through eight of two private and three public schools completed a 28-item survey during a health education class. It included Kids Eating Disorder Survey (1993) and items about sports activities and use of sports and exercise to control weight.

Over half (56%) the girls believed that they "look fat" and the mean difference between their measured weight and "desired" weight was 8.0 pounds. The group reported an average of 2.1 weight-dissatisfied beliefs and restrictive eating or disordered (fasting, diet pills) behaviors. Respondent students played in an average of 4.5 sports, most commonly basketball and soccer. Nearly a fourth reported using sports to lose weight. Thirteen percent (n=30) had ever engaged in a dangerous practice such as vomiting or pill use.

There was no significant relationship between the total number of sports played and the number of dangerous or restrictive eating behaviors. Participants in some types of sports (aerobics, cheerleading, dance, gymnastics) were somewhat more likely to diet than those in the team ball sports.

Self-esteem and well-being associated with youth sports participation may confer a protective effect against eating disordered beliefs in middle school years.

(Burckes-Miller M and Burak L. Am J Health Educ 2002;33(6):338-343.)

Comment: Middle school years are a potent time to build positive beliefs and habits for life. Schools and communities ought to build on the positive effects of sport activities and minimize negative pressures, undue competition, and unrealistic weight rules that usually appear during high school. -J.O.



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