
Ballet dancers are frequently regarded as having a higher risk of developing eating disorders (ED). This paper describes the eating habits and prevalence of ED in a group of female students from a dance academy in Rome, Italy. Participants were assessed with an array of measures conventionally employed (usually singly) in epidemiological studies of ED, namely: an anthropometrical-nutritional evaluation, the EAT, EDI, and BUT questionnaires, and the EDE interview. The 160 students who agreed to participate were evaluated anthropometrically, nutritionally and psychometrically and 83 underwent the EDE structured interview. Their calorie intake was insufficient in all age groups in terms of the nutritional standards required by their daily physical activity. EAT, EDI and BUT enhanced concerns about dieting, food intake control and body image. The significance of the correlations between calorie intake and the EAT Dieting and the EDI Perfectionism and Interceptive Awareness scores increased in function of age. Food, weight and body image concerns increased with age and length of time in the ballet environment The reduced calorie intake was not necessarily linked to the presence of psychopathological signs.
anthropometrical data; ballet dancers; eating disorders; nutritional behavior; psychometric measures, Adult, Analysis of Variance, Adolescent, Anthropometry, Psychometrics, Body Weight, Feeding Behavior, Feeding and Eating Disorders, Surveys and Questionnaires, Body Image, Humans, Female, Dancing, Child
anthropometrical data; ballet dancers; eating disorders; nutritional behavior; psychometric measures, Adult, Analysis of Variance, Adolescent, Anthropometry, Psychometrics, Body Weight, Feeding Behavior, Feeding and Eating Disorders, Surveys and Questionnaires, Body Image, Humans, Female, Dancing, Child
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