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Sex-role traits and the comorbidity of symptoms of disordered eating and problem drinking

journal contribution
posted on 2001-01-01, 00:00 authored by R Williams, L Ricciardelli
The symptoms of problem drinking and disordered eating were studied independently in relation to sex-role traits and also for evidence of comorbidity in a student sample of 217 women. The participants completed surveys that assessed positive and negative sex-role traits, reported drinking levels, alcohol dependence, problem drinking, bulimic symptoms, dietary restraint, and drive for thinness. Eating symptoms were related to both the negative and positive traits of Femininity, but self-descriptions involving negative traits (passivity, dependence, unassertiveness, etc.) showed the strongest relationship. High scores on identification with the traits typically labelled as Masculinity were related to drinking but there was an important difference between drinking per se (which was related to Positive Masculinity) and drinking found to be associated with drinking problems, which was related to Negative Masculinity (aggression, showing-off, rudeness, etc.). Feminine traits were also related to drinking. Low identification with the traits of Negative Femininity was associated with non-problem drinking, whereas low identification with the traits of Positive Femininity were associated with problem-related drinking. Young women who displayed comorbid symptoms described themselves by a high identification with the traits of both Negative Masculinity and Negative Femininity. It was argued that comorbidity reveals a more extreme form of the sex-role conflict previously described in relation to disordered control over both eating and drinking when considered independently.

History

Journal

Eating behaviours

Volume

2

Issue

1

Season

Spring

Pagination

67 - 77

Publisher

Elsevier Science BV

Location

Amsterdam, Netherlands

ISSN

1471-0153

eISSN

1873-7358

Language

eng

Notes

Available online 9 April 2001.

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2001, Elsevier Science

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