Regular Family Meals Shown to Reduce Eating Disorders in Adolescents
With all of the paparazzi and media backlash that stars and media icons receive today it’s no wonder they are prone to eating disorders and vanity. The pressure put on women in the entertainment and modeling business is immense, and many stars suffer from eating disorders put onto them by the stress of being in the limelight. These women are often idolized by our young girls and can be harmful to establishing a positive and healthy self-image. According to an article in Archives of Pediatrics and Medicine (Jama/Archives), “An adolescent girl who regularly has family meals is less likely to suffer and go on to suffer form an eating disorder or consume laxatives, diet pills, or take some extreme measure to control her weight.”
The targeted risk of eating disorder generally increases as the child matures from adolescence into adulthood, explain the authors. “Disordered eating behaviors are associates with a number of harmful behavioral, physical and psychological consequence, including poorer dietary quality, weight gain and obesity onset, depressive symptoms and the onset of eating disorders. Thus, it is important to identify strategies for the prevention of disordered eating behaviors.”
Sitting down for a family meal may be one answer to this rising trend. Having a child on a set eating schedule will help to maintain their natural biological intake cycle as well as help to later reinforce similar cycles as they get older. If possible dinner should be free from outside distractions such as televisions or movies for the most part, and family members should be encouraged to talk about their happenings at school or work or other types of positive conversation.
As a child who was raised with the every night sit down dinner with my parents and the occasional family pizza and a movie, I definitely think that this type of traditional pattern is helpful for a number of reasons. Because of the constant interaction I had with my parents, planning out family schedules and thoughts during dinner gave us time for everyone to be on the same page. This minimized “surprises” and helped to reinforce memory and schedule so that we had very few “oops” family moments. I also think that this type of dinner is helpful because now as I have become a mother, I have a broad knowledge base of meal options to feed my own daughter simply from remembering the meals that were fed to me.
Dinnertime should be a pleasant time and can also be a great bonding time for both parent and child. Having your children help out in preparing, cooking, place-setting, and clean up helps them later in life when they no longer have a parent to watch over them. As according to to Dianne Neumark-Sztainer, Ph.d, M.P.H. , R.D., of the University of Minneapolis, “Teenage girls who ate with their families at least five times each week in 1999 were substantially less likely to report using extreme measures, such as using diuretics or making themselves vomit to control their weight in 2004, this was despite such factors as social demographics, BMI and family connectedness. ”
This statistic was not as great in the male gender that were tested, and reasons for this variation are generally unclear. “Perhaps boys who engage in regular family meals are different in some way that increases their risk for disordered eating behaviors. There is also the possibility that adolescent boys and girls have different experiences at family meals. For example, girls may have more involvement in food preparation and other food-related tasks, which may play a protective role in the development of disordered eating behaviors. Finally, family meals may offer more benefits to adolescent girls, who may be more sensitive to and likely to be influenced by interpersonal and familial relationships than are adolescent boys.”
These findings and other related studies should serve as a motivating factor in helping families to find ways to eat meals together. “Health care professionals have an important role to play in reinforcing the benefits of family meals, helping families set realistic goals for increasing family meal frequency given schedules of adolescents and their parents, exploring ways to enhance the atmosphere at family meals with adolescents and discussing strategies for creating healthful and easy-to-prepare family meals,” they conclude. “Schools and community organizations should also be encouraged to make it easier for families to have shared mealtimes on a regular basis.”
Source:
“Family Meals and Disordered Eating in Adolescents. Longitudinal Findings From Project EAT”
Dianne Neumark-Sztainer, PhD, MPH, RD; Marla E. Eisenberg, ScD, MPH; Jayne A. Fulkerson, PhD; Mary Story, PhD, RD; Nicole I. Larson, MPH, RD
Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med. 2008;162(1):17-22.
Click here to read more from this study: http://archpedi.ama-assn.org/cgi/content/full/162/1/17
Tags: adolescents, eating disorders, family, meal planning












Joanna Poppink, LMFT says...
This is a wonderful essay on the benefits of the family dinner where everyone sits down together to share a meal.
Yes, family dinners can encourage good nutrition and reinforce a sense of healthy time structure for daily living.
However, the most important aspect of the family dinner, in terms of eating disorder prevention, is love.
Reliable, trustworthy family gatherings where everyone talks and listens, where adults and children expect and respect the presence of each other, where arguments and laughter and serious discussion mingle in an atmosphere of reliable loving presence - that is key to eating disorder prevention.
A sturdy soul with a sturdy sense of self and a certaintly that she is lovable
and loving cannot co-exist with an eating disorder.
Joanna Poppink, MFT, Los Angeles psychotherapist specializing in eating disorder treatment.
Jan says...
Families should eat together for a big variety of reasons and this is a good reason. Good idea for families to consider.