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Higher Weight Status and Restrictive Eating Disorders: An Overlooked Concern
Journal of Adolescent HealthVol. 56Issue 1p1–2Published in issue: January, 2015- Dianne Neumark-Sztainer
Cited in Scopus: 14The study by Lebow et al. [1], in this issue of the Journal of Adolescent Health, has important implications for the eating and weight-related health of young people. First of all, we learn that weight loss in adolescents with body mass index (BMI) values above the 85th percentile for age [2] may be a cause for concern. Second, we learn that adolescents with “normal” BMI values (i.e., values not typically viewed as underweight) may have serious restrictive eating disorders. Related to both these points, and of grave concern, is that young people who begin their journey to an eating disorder at BMI values that place them in the overweight or obese categories have a much longer duration from the beginning of eating disorder symptoms to the beginning of treatment compared with youth who begin from lower weights (19.9 months vs. - Review articleOpen Access
The New Imperative: Reducing Adolescent-Related Violence by Building Resilient Adolescents
Journal of Adolescent HealthVol. 52Issue 2SupplementS43–S45Published online: October 10, 2012- Elizabeth Ward
- Deanna Ashley
Cited in Scopus: 8Involvement in violence is affected by a variety of risk factors and timing, duration, number of risks, and intensity of risk factors. The earlier the exposure to risk starts, the longer the exposure continues, the number of risks one is exposed to, and intensity of the risk factors experienced are all important. A child who is severely beaten, sexually abused, or both; one who grows up witnessing intimate partner or family violence; one who attends a failing school or is not involved in structured after-school activities; or one who lives in a violent neighborhood is at increased risk of becoming involved in violent behavior.