Boston, MA -- Eating disorders among adolescent
girls and boys can have substantial negative impact on their health and lead to
dangerous weight-control behaviors, such as self-induced vomiting or abusing
laxatives or diet pills to control weight. The middle school age is a high risk
time, especially for girls starting to engage in these dangerous weight-control
behaviors that affect millions of Americans. Researchers at the Harvard School
of Public Health (HSPH) set out to determine if an obesity prevention program
called 5-2-1-Go! could reduce the risk of eating disorder symptoms and harmful
weight-control behaviors in adolescents. The study showed that almost 4% of
middle-school girls receiving only their regular health education began
vomiting or abusing laxatives or diet pills, but just 1% of the girls in the
5-2-1-Go! program did so. The results showed no effect of the program on
middle-school boys. The study appears in the September 2007 issue of Archives
of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine.
"We are very encouraged by the results," said S. Bryn
Austin, assistant professor at HSPH and a researcher at Children's Hospital in Boston. "We are hopeful
that carefully designed health promotion programs like this one may help us
prevent both eating disorders and overweight at the same time. The protective
effect that we found was strong and held up under two rigorously designed
studies," she said.
The 5-2-1-Go! program (eat 5
servings of fruits and vegetables daily, limit screen time to no more than 2
hours a day, and get at least 1 hour of physical activity daily) includes the
Planet Health curriculum, which was developed by HSPH researchers. It
emphasizes eating a balanced diet, staying physically active and reducing the
amount of time spent watching television. A previous study of the Planet Health
curriculum had shown a protective effect on disordered weight-control behaviors
in girls. The researchers wanted to see if that beneficial effect could be
repeated in a larger study among a different group of schools.
The randomized, controlled study took place in 13 middle
schools in Massachusetts
between 2002 and 2004 and involved 1,451 sixth- and seventh-graders (749 girls,
702 boys). Six schools utilized the 5-2-1-Go! curriculum and seven utilized
just their regular health education. The results showed a two-thirds reduction
in risk of adopting disordered weight control behaviors among girls in the
5-2-1-Go! program.
The results suggest that it may be possible for school-based
programs to help prevent obesity and eating disorder symptoms in adolescent
girls. "Unhealthy weight loss behaviors and overweight are taking an enormous
toll on the health of young people today," said senior author Karen E.
Peterson, director of the Program in Public Health Nutrition at HSPH and an
associate professor at the School. "These problems may be linked in a number of
ways, and the solutions are likely to be too. Approaches that foster healthy
weights by changing lifestyles of youth in schools seem to be very promising."
The authors note that further studies are needed to tackle
the question of how other obesity prevention programs are affecting eating
disorder symptoms in young people. "We found that our obesity prevention
program was safe, that is, it did not worsen eating disorder symptoms and even
protected against the development of eating disorder symptoms among girls,"
said Austin. "The team of scientists and educators that created the program was
also very careful not to single out or stigmatize overweight kids. Those
involved with other obesity prevention programs in schools and communities
around the country should look at the effects of those programs on eating
disorder symptoms and weight-related bullying to make sure they're safe for the
children."
The study was supported by the Leadership Education in
Adolescent Health project, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services; the
Berkowitz Family Legal Sea Foods Fellowship in Public Health Nutrition at HSPH;
and the Massachusetts Department of Public Health. Drs. Wiecha and Peterson
receive royalties as co-authors of the Planet Health curriculum.
"School-Based Overweight Preventive Intervention Lowers
Incidence of Disordered Weight-Control Behaviors in Early Adolescent Girls," S.
Bryn Austin, Juhee Kim, Jean Wiecha, Philip J. Troped, Henry A. Feldman, Karen
E. Peterson, Archives of Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine, Vol. 161,
No. 9, September 2007.