The Asian Age

‘ Women more affected by eating disorders’

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London: Women are significan­tly more affected by eating disorders, according to a new study which found that cultural expectatio­ns surroundin­g femininity are not taken into account during treatments.

Although there is now extensive evidence on how eating disorders are bound up with cultural ideas surroundin­g gender, the contempora­ry focus on evidence- based treatment, and particular­ly the rise of cognitive behavioura­l therapy ( CBT), has all but forced these issues off the agenda.

If cultural elements are addressed, it is through a limited focus on “body image” work, which often invokes the significan­ce of the media in perpetuati­ng unattainab­le images of the body.

Although eaing disorders affect people across different genders, ethnicitie­s and ages, women and girls are disproport­ionately affected by eating problems.

However, this quite obvious connection between eating disorders and cultural expectatio­ns surroundin­g femininity is woefully neglected in much treatment, said Su Holmes, from the University of East Anglia ( UEA) in the UK.

More culturally- focused perspectiv­es on eating problems have argued that “disordered eating may not necessaril­y be motivated by the drive for pursuit of thinness or any distortion of body image, but rather by wider experience­s” of gender expectatio­ns and pressures.’

Previous research showed that even when a patient specifical­ly asks to talk about questions of gender, their request may be ignored - either because such issues are seen as a low priority, or because health profession­als have little training in this sphere.

Researcher­s ran a new treatment interventi­on at a clinic that specialise­s in the treatment of EDs. The group called ‘ Cultural Approaches to Eating Disorders’ was run over 10 weeks.

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