Fifteen-Year Prevalence, Trajectories, and Predictors of Body Dissatisfaction From Adolescence to Middle Adulthood

Author:

Wang Shirley B.1ORCID,Haynos Ann F.2,Wall Melanie M.34,Chen Chen5,Eisenberg Marla E.6,Neumark-Sztainer Dianne7

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychology, Harvard University

2. Department of Psychiatry, University of Minnesota

3. Department of Biostatistics, Columbia University

4. Department of Psychiatry, Columbia University

5. Mental Health Data Science, Research Foundation for Mental Hygeine

6. Division of General Pediatrics and Adolescent Health, Department of Pediatrics, University of Minnesota

7. Division of Epidemiology and Community Health, School of Public Health, University of Minnesota

Abstract

Body dissatisfaction is common in adolescence and associated with negative outcomes (e.g., eating disorders). We identified common individual trajectories of body dissatisfaction from midadolescence to adulthood and predictors of divergent patterns. Participants were 1,455 individuals from four waves of Project EAT (Eating and Activity in Teens and Young Adults), a population-based, 15-year longitudinal study. Aggregate body dissatisfaction increased over 15 years, which was largely attributable to increases in weight. Growth mixture modeling identified four common patterns of body dissatisfaction, revealing nearly 95% of individuals experienced relatively stable body dissatisfaction from adolescence through adulthood. Baseline depression, self-esteem, parental communication/caring, peer dieting, and weight-based teasing predicted differing trajectories. Body dissatisfaction appears largely stable from midadolescence onward. There may be a critical period for body image development during childhood/early adolescence. Clinicians should intervene with clients experiencing body dissatisfaction before it becomes chronic and target depression, self-esteem, parent/child connectedness, and responses to teasing and peer dieting.

Funder

National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute

National Institute of Mental Health

Division of Graduate Education

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Clinical Psychology

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