Author:
SULLIVAN P. F.,BULIK C. M.,KENDLER K. S.
Abstract
Background. We sought to determine whether there was
empirical support for the diagnostic
thresholds of DSM-IV bulimia nervosa (BN) and whether an empirically derived
typology
resembled the diagnostic categories of DSM-IV.Methods. Detailed information about bulimic behaviours were
assessed via personal interview in a
population-based sample of 1897 Caucasian female twins. We assessed
the lifetime prevalence of the
component bulimic behaviours and DSM-IV and DSM-III-R BN. Latent class
analysis of nine
separate bulimic symptoms was used to develop an empirical typology of
bulimic behaviour.Results. Although the lifetime prevalences of bingeing
(23·6%) and vomiting (4·8%) were relatively
common, DSM-IV BN was distinctly uncommon (0·5%). The criterion
that specified the frequency
and duration of bingeing and vomiting was an important limiting
condition. Analysis of alternative
thresholds found little support for the DSM-IV thresholds requiring
an average of twice per week
for 3 months. Latent class analysis yielded an interpretable four class
solution that had little overlap with the DSM-IV typology.Conclusions. As in other studies of unselected samples of
women, the lifetime presence of bulimic
behaviours are relatively high. Our results suggest that the DSM-IV approach
to categorizing
bulimic behaviour inadequately captures the spectrum of lifetime
bulimic behaviours in the general population.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Applied Psychology
Cited by
97 articles.
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