Volume 35, Issue 2 pp. 198-203
Regular Article

Body image and eating disturbance in India: Media and interpersonal influences

Hemal Shroff

Hemal Shroff

Department of Psychology, University of South Florida, Tampa, Florida

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J. Kevin Thompson

Corresponding Author

J. Kevin Thompson

Department of Psychology, University of South Florida, Tampa, Florida

Department of Psychology, PCD 4118G, University of South Florida, 4202 East Fowler Avenue, Tampa, FL 33620Search for more papers by this author
First published: 25 February 2004
Citations: 61

Abstract

Objective

The current study was designed to examine the relationships among the variables of body mass index (BMI), interpersonal teasing, media internalization, body dissatisfaction, and drive for thinness in samples of young adult and middle school females from India.

Method

Ninety-six adolescent and 93 adult females from Bombay, India, completed measures of body dissatisfaction, restriction, teasing history, and internalization of media images. Correlational and path analytic procedures were used to examine the data.

Results

Path analyses indicated that teasing and internalization mediated the effect of BMI on body dissatisfaction and in certain cases influenced drive for thinness.

Discussion

These findings replicate and extend previous work with U.S., Australian, and Swedish samples, suggesting that there are similar potential risk factors, cross-culturally, that may explain the development of eating and shape-related problems. © 2004 by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Int J Eat Disord 35: 198–203, 2004.

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