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Eating disorders and physical multimorbidity in the English general population

journal contribution
posted on 2023-09-13, 13:25 authored by Lee Smith, Guillermo Lopez-Sanchez, Emilio Fernandez-Egea, Tamsin Ford, Christopher Parris, Benjamin Underwood, Laurie Butler, Yvonne Barnett, Mike Trott, Ai Koyanagi

Purpose

People with eating disorders may be at increased risk for physical health problems, but there are no data on the relationship between eating disorders and physical multimorbidity (i.e., ≥ 2 physical conditions) and its potential mediators. Thus, we investigated this association in a representative sample of adults from the UK, and quantified the extent to which this can be explained by various psychological and physical conditions, and lifestyle factors.

Methods

Cross-sectional data of the 2007 Adult Psychiatric Morbidity Survey were analyzed. Questions from the five-item SCOFF screening instrument were used to identify possible eating disorder. Respondents were asked about 20 physical health conditions. Multivariable logistic regression and mediation analysis were conducted.

Results


Data on 7403 individuals aged ≥ 16 years were analyzed [mean (SD) age 46.3 (18.6) years; 48.6% males]. After adjustment, possible eating disorder was associated with 2.11 (95%CI = 1.67–2.67) times higher odds for physical multimorbidity. Anxiety disorder explained the largest proportion this association (mediated percentage 26.3%), followed by insomnia (21.8%), perceived stress (13.4%), depression (13.1%), obesity (13.0%), and alcohol dependence (4.3%).

Conclusion

Future longitudinal studies are warranted to understand potential causality and the underlying mechanisms in the association between eating disorder and multimorbidity, and whether addressing the identified potential mediators in people with eating disorders can reduce multimorbidity.

History

Refereed

  • Yes

Volume

28

Publication title

Eating and Weight Disorders: studies on anorexia, bulimia and obesity

ISSN

1124-4909

Publisher

Springer

File version

  • Accepted version
  • Published version

Item sub-type

Article

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  • School of Education and Social Care Outputs

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