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A network analysis of eating disorder symptoms and co-occurring alcohol misuse among heterosexual and sexual minority college women.

Author
Abstract
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Eating disorders and alcohol misuse are common problems among college women. Individually, both have high prevalence rates and are associated with a significant economic burden. Yet eating disorders and alcohol misuse also frequently present simultaneously, which may increase symptom severity and related impairment. These associations are especially important to test in sexual minority populations, as symptoms may present differently, and the prevalence and personal cost of these disorders may be even higher for this group. The present study (N = 1072 undergraduate college women) used network analysis to identify pathways, central symptoms, and bridge symptoms across alcohol misuse and eating disorder symptoms. A network comparison test was used to determine if the network structure differed between heterosexual women (n = 923) and sexual minority women (n = 149). For the overall network, cognitive restraint, excessive exercise, and frequency of binge drinking, were the most central symptoms. Bridge symptoms included drinking in the morning, purging, alcohol-related guilt, and muscle building. Heterosexual and sexual minority women did not differ significantly in network structure or global strength. Regardless of sexual orientation, prevention efforts for eating disorders and alcohol misuse among college women should target central and bridge symptoms.

Year of Publication
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2021
Journal
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Addictive behaviors
Volume
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118
Number of Pages
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106867
ISSN Number
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0306-4603
URL
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https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0306-4603(21)00052-6
DOI
:
10.1016/j.addbeh.2021.106867
Short Title
:
Addict Behav
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