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Cultural Factors in Collegiate Eating Disorder Pathology: When Family Culture Clashes With Individual Culture

Abstract

Objective

The authors evaluated the validity of familial enmeshment (extreme proximity in family relationships) as a risk factor for eating disorders across cultural value orientations. They tested the hypothesis that although familial enmeshment may be a risk factor for eating disorder pathology for (1) participants of non-Asian descent or (2) culturally independent participants, enmeshment will not be a risk factor for (1) participants of Asian descent or (2) culturally interdependent participants.

Participants

255 undergraduate women participated.

Methods

Participants completed questionnaires on cultural value orientations, enmeshment, and eating disorder pathology.

Results

As hypothesized, enmeshment was related to eating disorder pathology in non-Asian American and culturally independent participants, but not in Asian American and culturally interdependent participants.

Conclusions

Depending on cultural values, enmeshment may or may not be a risk factor for eating disorders. This study highlights the importance of examining risk factors in the appropriate cultural framework when considering college student mental health.

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