Educational attainment in eating disorders: What can we learn from visualising data

Author:

Nielsen Søren1ORCID,Vilmar Janne Walløe2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Psychiatric Research Unit Psychiatry Region Zealand Slagelse Denmark

2. Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry Psychiatry Region Zealand Roskilde Denmark

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundEducational attainment is an understudied outcome in eating disorders (ED). We compared the educational attainment of individuals with and without ED.MethodsThis study is a nationwide, register‐based, observational epidemiological study using record linkage. The studied cohorts were (1) all persons treated psychiatrically for ED from 1970 to 2014, and (2) a control population matched for sex, age, and place of residence. The International Standard Classification of Education 2011 was used to classify educational attainment. We employed ineqord, a series of graphical and analytical tools that are appropriate for comparing the distributions of ordinal data (Jenkins, 2020).ResultsFemales with ED attained higher educational levels than males with ED. Males with ED had lower average educational levels than controls. On average, female controls attained higher educational levels than patients with ED in the eating disorders not otherwise specified or overeating groups. Females with anorexia nervosa, differed from matched controls: While their median was the same, too many participants were in the lower and higher levels of educational attainment. Females with bulimia nervosa had higher educational levels than matched controls on average.ConclusionsEducational attainment differs between individuals with and without out ED for all ED diagnoses and in both sexes.

Funder

Region Sjælland

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health,Clinical Psychology

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