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      Consumer opinion on social policy approaches to promoting positive body image: Airbrushed media images and disclaimer labels

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      Journal of Health Psychology
      SAGE Publications

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          Risk and maintenance factors for eating pathology: a meta-analytic review.

          Eric Stice (2002)
          This meta-analytic review of prospective and experimental studies reveals that several accepted risk factors for eating pathology have not received empirical support (e.g., sexual abuse) or have received contradictory support (e.g.. dieting). There was consistent support for less-accepted risk factors(e.g., thin-ideal internalization) as well as emerging evidence for variables that potentiate and mitigate the effects of risk factors(e.g., social support) and factors that predict eating pathology maintenance(e.g., negative affect). In addition, certain multivariate etiologic and maintenance models received preliminary support. However, the predictive power of individual risk and maintenance factors was limited, suggesting it will be important to search for additional risk and maintenance factors, develop more comprehensive multivariate models, and address methodological limitations that attenuate effects.
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            Body dissatisfaction from adolescence to young adulthood: findings from a 10-year longitudinal study.

            Given mixed findings regarding the unique trajectories of female and male adolescents' body dissatisfaction over time, comprehensive longitudinal examinations are needed. This 10-year longitudinal, population-based study, with 1902 participants from diverse ethnic/racial and socioeconomic backgrounds in the Minneapolis/St. Paul metropolitan area, examined changes in body dissatisfaction from adolescence to young adulthood. Results revealed that: (a) female and male participants' body dissatisfaction increased between middle and high school, (b) body dissatisfaction increased further during the transition to young adulthood, and (c) this increase was associated with an increase in BMI over time, such that the upward trend in body dissatisfaction became nonsignificant when BMI was controlled. These results highlight a trend in which diverse female and male youth are increasingly dissatisfied with their bodies as their BMI increases from middle school to young adulthood, and emphasize the need for targeted prevention efforts to intervene in this trajectory and mitigate potential harm.
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              The Role of Social Comparison in the Effect of Magazine Advertisements on Women's Mood and Body Dissatisfaction

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Journal of Health Psychology
                J Health Psychol
                SAGE Publications
                1359-1053
                1461-7277
                July 10 2016
                July 10 2016
                : 22
                : 2
                : 164-175
                Article
                10.1177/1359105315597052
                b43cea28-f098-4c3b-bf37-ecb8ad8ad4ad
                © 2016

                http://journals.sagepub.com/page/policies/text-and-data-mining-license

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