Affiliation:
1. Child and Adolescent Psychiatry Unit, Department of Neuroscience Meyer Children's Hospital IRCCS Florence Italy
2. Department of Education, Languages, Intercultures, Literatures and Psychology University of Florence Florence Italy
Abstract
AbstractProblemThe COVID‐19 pandemic has triggered or exacerbated eating disorders (EDs), especially in adolescents. This study examined the prevalence of admissions of patients with EDs at the Child and Adolescent Psychiatry Unit from the pre‐COVID‐19 pandemic to March 2023 and explored the differences in dimensions of ED's symptomatology according to the year of access.MethodsWe included 174 children and adolescents, 94.3% females and 5.7% males, with a diagnosis of ED (Mage = 14.87; SD = 1.72). The Eating Disorder Inventory‐3 (EDI‐3), the Body Uneasiness Test (BUT) and Youth Self Report ASEBA (YSR) were assessed. A one‐way analysis of variance test was performed.FindingsEDs' hospitalization prevalence was higher in the years 2020 and 2021 compared to pre‐COVID‐19 and the year 2022. Considering the ED psychopathology (EDI‐3), findings showed a higher score in the dimension of the push to thinness, body dissatisfaction, asceticism, and fear of maturity in the year 2021 compared to pre‐pandemic. Regarding the discomfort related to the image of one's own body (BUT), results showed an increase in the global severity index in the year 2022 compared to pre‐pandemic and in weight phobia in the year 2021 compared to the year 2020. Concerning the internalizing symptoms (YSR), a tendency was found for withdrawal/depression, with higher levels in the year 2022 compared to the year 2020.ConclusionsOur study highlighted the increase of different types of EDs symptomatology related to concerns about weight, especially 2 and 3 years after the outbreak of the pandemic, on which the literature is still scarce, especially in the Italian context.
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Pediatrics,General Medicine,Pshychiatric Mental Health