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RESEARCH
General
Health
HEALTH
Exercise may not lift spirits of
women with eating disorders
Craig
Chamberlain, Education Editor
(217) 333-2894; cdchambe@uiuc.edu
9/1/02
CHAMPAIGN, Ill.
Exercise not only improves your health, it makes you feel good.
Its a message constantly reinforced through research, advertisements
and the news media.
For a subset of women those with eating disorders exercise
may have no feel-good effects. In fact, it may induce just the opposite
feeling. And women in general may get less psychological benefit from
exercising than men.
Those are among the conclusions presented last month by researchers
Jennifer Gerlach and Dorothy Espelage at the American Psychological
Association annual convention in Chicago. Gerlach, the principal researcher
on the study, is a doctoral student in educational psychology at the
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Espelage, the study's co-author,
is a professor of educational psychology in the universitys College
of Education.
The study involved 324 undergraduates at Illinois, 235 women and 86
men, with an average age of 19.9 years, who were asked to complete questionnaires
assessing exercise behavior, strategies for coping with stress, self-esteem,
life satisfaction, positive and negative affect (similar to mood), depression,
anxiety and eating behavior. The men and women were comparable in their
level of exercise.
The researchers' primary goal was to determine how exercise was used
as a strategy for coping with stress. But what they found in the process
were curious associations between exercise and psychological health.
For the men as a group, they found statistically significant associations
between exercise and almost every measure of psychological health. For
the women, however, most of those associations were either weak or statistically
insignificant. The researchers also found that exercise was related
to both positive and negative affect, "and that didn't make sense,"
Gerlach said.
They hypothesized that eating disorders played a part in the contrary
numbers, and so split the women into subgroups. Eleven percent were
categorized as having an eating disorder, based on their responses in
the questionnaires. The other 89 percent were put in a non-eating-disorders
group.
For the majority group, exercise was related to positive affect, Gerlach
said. "But for the women who had an eating disorder, exercise was
related to negative affect, and there was a slight trend for more depression
and more anxiety." For those women, "exercise isn't related
to positive psychological health," she said.
One possible explanation may be that men and women exercise for different
reasons, with societal pressures causing women to worry more about body
image, over just feeling good or having fun, Gerlach said. Over-exercise
may be a component of eating disorders that needs further exploration,
she said.
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