ULTRA-THIN MAGAZINE MODELS NEGATIVELY IMPACT GIRLS WITH PRE-EXISTING BODY IMAGE DISSATISFACTION
by Eric Stice, Ph.D., Diane Spangler, Ph.D., and W. Stewart Agras, MD
Previous research indicated that exposure to ultra-thin models in
fashion magazines leads to excessive dieting and body dissatisfaction among
adolescent girls. Only those girls who already
had body-image problems were at risk for negative effects.
Psychologists Eric Stice, Ph.D., University of Texas at Austin; Diane
Spangler, Ph.D., Brigham Young University; and W. Stewart Agras, MD,
Stanford University, randomly assigned 219 girls, ages 13 to 17, to a
15-month subscription to Seventeen magazine, which is the most widely read
magazine among adolescent females, or to a no-magazine control group and
followed the girls for 20 months. Despite the increased amount of time
participants spent reading the fashion magazine, there were no effects on
body dissatisfaction, thin-ideal internalization, dieting or negative affect
over time. The only adverse effect occurred in adolescents with initially elevated body dissatisfaction:
Exposure to the fashion magazine resulted in increased negative
affect/depression for these adolescents.
"The discrepancy between our study and previous research is largely because
we measured the effects in a natural environment," said Dr. Stice. "Previous
research that suggested magazine-portrayed, thin-ideal images would lead to
eating disorders and low self-esteem among teenage girls consisted of
laboratory experiments. This study suggests that the negative effects have
little long-term impact."
Because the findings indicate that the only at-risk individuals are those
who already have body-image problems, why the continued correlation between
magazine models and eating disorders among teenage girls? "Perhaps
high-risk individuals seek out thin-ideal media messages to learn more
effective weight control techniques," said Dr. Stice.
However, Dr. Stice cautions that previous studies should not be discounted.
"Forty-one percent of adolescent females report that magazines are their
most important source of information on dieting and health, and 61 percent
of adolescent females read at least one fashion magazine regularly," said
the authors. "I think the media reflects a larger cultural pressure for an
ultra-slender body," said Dr. Stice. "Parents, peers and dating partners may
play a somewhat more important role than the mass media because feedback
from these sources about body size is more personal."
09/12/99
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