Is Teen Vegetarianism an Eating Disorder?

By Opposing Views Editorial Staff , To Protect and Serve Opposing Views - April 07, 2009

Icoemail3
Comments(1) | (0)
Many adolescents who adopt vegetarian lifestyles may be engaging in unhealthy eating behaviors, according to new a study published by the Journal of the American Dietetic Association.

The study, led by nutritionist Ramona Robinson-O'Brien, an assistant professor at the College of Saint Benedict and Saint John's University in Minnesota, sought to “examine characteristics of current and former adolescent and young adult vegetarians and investigate the relationships between vegetarianism, weight, dietary intake, and weight-control behaviors.”

Robinson-O’Brien and her team discovered that vegetarian teens were more likely than others to have healthy intakes of fruits, vegetables and fat, but that “current vegetarians may be at increased risk for binge eating with loss of control, while former vegetarians may be at increased risk for extreme unhealthful weight-control behaviors.”

The team went on to conclude that “it would be beneficial for clinicians to inquire about current and former vegetarian status when assessing risk for disordered eating behaviors.”

See the study here.



Are vegetarians healthier?
See the Opposing Views debate.
This content is inappropriate
Loading

Please select the category that most closely reflects your concern about this content, so that we can review it and determine whether it violates Civility 101 or isn't appropriate for some other reason.
Abusing this feature is also a violation of Civility 101.

Explanation:


Regarding Article
NEWS: Is Teen Vegetarianism an Eating Disorder?

Thank You for your Comment

We review all comments before they're posted. For more on our comment policy, please see our FAQ.

  • Babaroni
    No

    Teens do have high rates of eating disorders, and some of those kids with disordered eating behaviors may also adopt vegetarianism , because they desire to eat in a healthy manner, even though they have difficulty discerning what healthy eating consists in. But that does not make vegetarianism inherently unhealthy. If anything, I'd be glad to know that at least these kids are obtaining better quality nutrition in the food they are choosing to eat. If they starve or binge on meat and dairy, they will be equally ill, and probably have a poorer nutritional profile overall.

    - BabaroniUS April 7, 2009 3:36PM

    Reply to this Recommend (0) Icon flag

    Thank You for your Comment

    We review all comments before they're posted. For more on our comment policy, please see our FAQ.

See Related...