Letter
Child Study Center
volume 6  number 4                                                       march / april 2002
education  clinical care  professional training  scientific research  school outreach  information update
                                                   ADOLESCENTS AND BODY IMAGE:
        Editors Comment
                                                       W h a t s T y p i c a l a n d W h a t s N o t
                                               boys in the same age bracket reported             Virginia, 12: "The best body is ribs, skin
    Concern with body image  the
                                               overall dissatisfaction. These figures were    and bones, and that's the only thing I care
 internal personal picture boys and girls                                                     about."
                                               much higher than those reported in previ-
 have of their bodies  can become a                                                             Karen, 15: "I'm fat and ugly. I have to
                                               ous surveys conducted by the same maga-
 major preoccupation during adolescence.                                                      lose twenty pounds. I need a nose job, my
                                               zine in 1972 and 1985.1 Why are more
 The perfect body as defined in the social                                                  hair is a mousy color; my lips are too thin
                                               people becoming dissatisfied with their
 culture can become a measure of self-         appearance? The answer is certainly com-       and I could use lip injections. I exercised
 worth and can cause many teens to un-         plex and influenced by a number of fac-        my stomach muscles and now they're hard,
 dervalue other abilities, interests and       tors, including the growing disparity be-      but I still have a belly."
 talents. Adolescents must also deal with      tween our actual body weights and those
 developmental challenges such as adjust-      of models, actors and celebrities depicted     Historical Context
 ing to hormonal and physical changes, as      in advertising and the media.                      Although women in our society have al-
 well as to new social and academic                                                           ways been concerned with appearance,
 demands. Overemphasis on conforming                                                          standards of beauty have changed with the
 to current standards of beauty renders
                                               Body Image Defined
                                                                                              times. Thin was not always in. Prior to the
 them vulnerable to developing psycholo-          Body image is a person's inner con-         20th century, being thin was considered a
 gical problems.                               ception of his or her own physical appea-      sign of poverty, ill health and fragility. Plump-
                                               rance. This conception may or may not          ness was the ideal. Historian Joan Jacobs
    In this issue of the NYU Child Study       correlate with objective reality. Each         Brumberg2 points to the differences be-
 Center Letter, we discuss the meaning         person holds an image of the physically        tween past and present ideas of physical
 and development of body image and dis-        perfect person in mind and evaluates his or    beauty. She writes, "in the twentieth cen-
 tinguish normal dissatisfaction with ones    her appearance against this ideal. A person    tury, the body has become the central per-
 body with more serious disorders. Al-         who is pleased with his or her body shape      sonal project of American girls." Brumberg
 though no single cause for disturbances in    and appearance is said to have a positive      describes how the experience of living in an
 body image has been pinpointed, an            self-image. The psychological construct of     adolescent body is shaped by the historical
                                               body image includes cognitive and emo-         moment. In the 1920s, adolescent females
 array of risk factors  biological,
                                               tional aspects as well as sensory input. For   made attempts to restrict calories and lower
 psychological, familial and sociocultural                                                    their weight; this marked the first "dieting"
                                               instance, we modify our ideas of our own
  are involved. Treatment options are also                                                   period for American females. The "flapper
                                               bodies according to our emotional state as
 discussed.                                                                                   dress," with its emphasis on showing off
                                               well as the reactions of others in the en-
                                AG/HSK         vironment.                                     the legs, set the stage for the throwing off of
                                                                                              corsets and subsequent restricted eating.
                                                  Much of the research on body image          Brumberg chronicles the dieting frenzy of a
                                                                                              high school girl of that time: "I'm so tired
                                               has been conducted on adolescents as
Introduction                                   this developmental period is not only one
                                                                                              of being fat! I'm going back to school weigh-
   Much has been written about body                                                           ing 119 pounds  I swear it. Three months
                                               of great physical change but also the time     in which to lose thirty pounds  but I'll do
image over the past decades  almost all of    that teens begin to subject themselves to      it  or die in the attempt." Brumberg also
it suggesting that both men and women          (often painful) scrutiny. The changes of       discusses how young girls' rising discontent
are growing increasingly dissatisfied with     puberty and resulting sexual maturation        with their appearance has reinforced a con-
their physical selves. The 1997 Psychology     often make adolescents feel self-conscious     sumer culture catering to these insecurities
Today Body Image Survey of 4,000 men           and awkward about their bodies.                throughout the 20th century. More recent-
and women asked participants about             Adolescent girls appear to be particularly     ly, the rise in popularity of blue jeans has
weight and attitudes towards their phy-        vulnerable to developing a negative body       paralleled females' insecurities about their
siques and specific body parts. Fifty-six      image. They tend to ignore other abilities     lower bodies  specifically the thighs and but-
percent of women revealed that they were       and focus on appearance as evidence of         tocks. The recent surge in popularity of cell-
dissatisfied with their overall appearance,    worthiness  with consequent lowered           ulite remedies has added fuel to the fire.
and an astounding 89% of women wanted          self-esteem and increased risk for             Many adolescent females are dating and
to lose weight. Fifty-four percent of girls    psychiatric disorders, including eating        sexually active at younger ages than before,
aged 13-19 were dissatisfied, and 41% of       disorders.                                     heightening concerns about appearance.
education  clinical care  professional training  scientific research  school outreach  information update
                   SCHOOL OF
                    MEDICINE
                                               How Self-Image Develops:                          out" creates a disparity between the
                                               The Goodness-of-Fit Model                         cultural ideal of slimness and the actual
                                                                                                 body type  a massive "goodness of fit"
                                                  How do we develop an image of our
                                                                                                 disparity. In general, boys in the study did
                                               physical selves? Researcher Richard
                                                                                                 not show an increase in dissatisfaction as
               NEW YORK UNIVERSITY             Lerner3 has proposed a paradigm called
                                                                                                 they progressed in years; on the contrary,
           Kenneth G. Langone                  "goodness of fit." He states that each per-
                                                                                                 boys who were dissatisfied with their
   Chairman, Foundation Board of Trustees      son and his/her context are unique as a
                                                                                                 height at age 13 felt more comfortable
        Robert M. Glickman, M.D.               result of the specific combination of the
                                                                                                 with their height by age 15  reflecting the
                   Dean                        features of that person and the conditions
                                                                                                 fact that many were well into their growth
           NYU School of Medicine              of his/her environment. Individuals elicit
                                               reactions from others as a result of their        spurt by this age. The authors conclude
                                               physical (i.e., body build) and psychologi-       that the increase in height and muscle
             Editorial Board                   cal (i.e., behavior or temperament) chara-        mass that boys experience in puberty,
                                               cteristics. These reactions often feed back       bringing them closer to a cultural ideal,
Harold S. Koplewicz, M.D., Founding Editor
                                               to the individual, providing the basis for        may be related to their body image
Arnold and Debbie Simon Professor of Child
                                               further thought and action. Expectations          improvement.
        and Adolescent Psychiatry
    Director of the Child Study Center         are placed on a person as a result of the
  New York University School of Medicine       physical and/or social (i.e., parents, peers,        How do adolescents' judgements of
                                               media) components of a particular setting.        their own appearance relate to judgements
        Anita Gurian, Ph.D., Editor            The individual's success in differentially        by others? Which is a stronger predictor of
 Executive Editor, www.AboutOurKids.org        meeting these demands provides a basis for        dissatisfaction and lowered self-esteem?
        Clinical Assistant Professor           the feedback he/she gets from the environ-        These are complex questions. Using data
  New York University School of Medicine       ment. For instance, adolescents whose style       from a large-scale study called the Pen-
                                               of dress and hair meets parental approval         nsylvania Early Adolescent Transition
                                               might not simultaneously meet peer appro-         Study (PEATS), researcher Richard
          Howard Abikoff, Ph.D.
                                               val, or vice-versa. Problems in adjustment        Lerner5 and colleagues found that there
   Pevaroff-Cohn Professor of Psychiatry
                                               might develop as a result of mismatch, or         was no significant relationship between
            Director of Research
                                               lack of goodness-of-fit, in either the peer or    objective and subjective measures of at-
            Child Study Center
                                               parent context. The results of the present        tractiveness, and also little relationship
  New York University School of Medicine
                                               author's work over 15 years, as well as that      between objective ratings and individual
           Robert Cancro, M.D.                 of other researchers in the field, support the    adjustment. It was the adolescents' own
         Professor and Chairman                view that adolescents' physical characte-         ratings of themselves that were correlated
        Department of Psychiatry               ristics provide a basis of their own body-        with anxiety and self-worth. How we view
  New York University School of Medicine       image and psychosocial development by             ourselves appears to be more important
         Gabrielle A. Carlson, M.D.            either fulfilling or not fulfilling the stereo-   than how others see us.
   Professor of Psychiatry and Pediatrics      typical images of their social milieu.
 New York State University at Stony Brook
                                               Normative Discontent                              Distortions of Body Image
            Stella Chess, M.D.                                                                      Clearly, adolescent females who sub-
       Professor of Child Psychiatry              In the early adolescent and pre-teen
  New York University School of Medicine       years, girls whose bodies develop at a            jectively distort their body image, or those
                                               different pace than the average are               for whom there is a mismatch between
           Gail Furman, Ph.D.
                                               especially prone to dissatisfaction and low       their image and the environment, are at
     Womens Commission on Refugee                                                               risk for several serious psychiatric dis-
    Women and Children, United Nations         self-esteem. Girls who are precociously
                                               developed as well as those less well-             orders. Chief among these are the eating
            Glenn S. Hirsch, M.D.              developed than peers are at risk. There           disorders  anorexia nervosa and bulimia
  Assistant Professor of Clinical Psychiatry
                                               have been very few studies examining              nervosa. Anorexia nervosa, as defined in
    Deputy Director, Child Study Center                                                          the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of
   Medical Director, Division of Child and     adolescents' attitudes towards their bodies
           Adolescent Psychiatry               over time. However, in one such study,4           Mental Disorders, Fourth Edition (DSM
  New York University School of Medicine       the authors measured body image,                  IV) is an intense fear of gaining weight or
                                               objective (rater) physical attractiveness         becoming fat, even though underweight.6
           Rachel Klein, Ph.D.                                                                   Bulimia nervosa, felt to be a related dis-
         Professor of Psychiatry               and body mass index in the same 115 boys
  New York University School of Medicine       and girls at ages 13, 15, and 18. The             order, is characterized by recurrent epi-
                                               results were compelling; across the same          sodes of binge eating followed by recur-
             Maria Kovacs, Ph.D.                                                                 rent inappropriate compensatory beha-
           Professor of Psychiatry
                                               period in adolescence, girls' body image
 University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine   worsened while boys' improved. At age             vior (such as purging) in order to prevent
                                               13, the differences between the sexes were        weight gain. The pathophysiology of
       Wade P. Parks, M.D., Ph.D.              not dramatic, but the gap had widened             these disorders, including a myriad of
         Professor and Chairman                                                                  possible causes, is a separate area of
        Department of Pediatrics               considerably by age 15. The authors point
  New York University School of Medicine       out that as a normal consequence of               inquiry beyond the scope of the present
                                               puberty, girls experience an increase in          discussion. Most researchers and clini-
        Alexander Thomas, M.D.
                                               body mass with an accumulation of fat             cians agree upon the fact that both of
         Professor of Psychiatry                                                                 these disorders involve disturbances of
  New York University School of Medicine       around the hips and thighs. This "filling
education  clinical care  professional training  scientific research  school outreach  information update
perception, attitudes and behavior.              Margaret, a 17 year old Caucasian          Who is at Risk
Catherine Steiner-Adair7 sums up some of      female, was housebound for three months.         Over the past decades, the majority of
the research into the causes of eating        Margaret repeatedly told her family that      individuals with eating disorders have been
disorders, against a backdrop of female       she was ashamed of multiple aspects of her    young, female, white, and from middle to
adolescent development and societal           appearance including her "big" nose,          upper-class families in Western countries
values, as follows: "Girls who are able to    "small" breasts, "flat" hair and "bad"        and Japan. Girls with anorexia have
identify contemporary cultural values and     skin. In reality, these deformities were      traditionally been academically successful,
ideal images of women that are unsup-         minimal or nonexistent. Margaret spent        first or second-born children and often
portive of core female adolescent deve-       several hours per day scrutinizing her        work as dancers or athletes. They are said
lopmental needs and who are also able to      appearance in the mirror and constantly       to be compliant, approval-seeking, exces-
reject these values in choosing their own     asked her family for reassurance that she     sively dependent, perfectionistic and
female ideal image are not prone to eating    looked okay. Her once-active social life      socially anxious. Girls with bulimia, in
disorders. Girls who are unable to iden-      dwindled down to nothing, as she              contrast, tend to be more extroverted and
tify the societal values that are detrimen-   routinely avoided dating and social           more active interpersonally and socially. In
tal to their developmental needs, and who     situations. Recently, she decided to begin    the past decade, eating disorders have
identify with the ideal image that is         consulting with plastic surgeons in order     become more prevalent in the lower socio-
                                              to improve her appearance.                    economic classes, among women over 25
projected by these values, are at risk for
developing eating disorders." Research                                                      years of age and among minority group
                                                  The etiology of BDD is unknown, but it    members.11 The eating disorders often co-
into the biologic and genetic causes of
                                              is felt to be a combination of biologic and   exist with depression, anxiety and
eating disorders is presently being con-
                                              environmental factors. Body Dysmorphic        obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD).
ducted, and it appears that certain in-       Disorder is a serious psychiatric condition
dividuals have a biologic predisposition      and can have disastrous consequences,
to develop these illnesses.                                                                    In contrast to the eating disorders, Body
                                              including suicide. At its core is a distur-   Dysmorphic Disorder afflicts nearly equal
                                              bance of body image so profound that the      numbers of males and females and often
   Both anorexia and bulimia can have         preoccupation comes close to psychosis.       co-exists with social anxiety, depression
serious medical, as well as psychiatric                                                     and OCD. Muscle dysmorphia, consi-
consequences. A teen with anorexia who                                                      dered a subset of BDD, affects males
is severely underweight may require
                                              Vulnerability of Boys: The
                                                                                            almost exclusively and is associated with
hospitalization for malnutrition. Al-         Case of Muscle Dysmorphia                     (but not necessarily caused by) low self-
though a teen with bulimia nervosa                What about adolescent males? While        esteem and mood and anxiety disorders.
might appear healthier than one with          boys do not appear to suffer from body
anorexia, there are serious potential         dissatisfaction with quite the same           Treatments: The Eating
medical complications of bulimia inclu-       frequency as girls, they are more at risk
                                              than was previously realized. Boys are also
                                                                                            Disorders, BDD and Muscle
ding electrolyte imbalance as a result of
frequent vomiting, gastrointestinal as        subject to the media representation of the    Dysmorphia
well as dental problems, irregular heart-     "ideal" male body  in this case taut and        The first step in seeking treatment for
beat and even cardiac arrest.                 bulging with muscles. The development         these serious disorders is recognizing that
                                              of males body image is affected by action    the problem exists. As we know many, if
                                              toys and an onslaught of images in the        not most, adolescent girls want to lose
Body Dysmorphic Disorder:                     media glamorizing the muscular, fit body.     weight. If an adolescent loses as much as
                                              A recent study found that Playgirl center-    10 pounds, but appears to be eating in a
An Extreme Distortion                         folds have become more muscular over the      healthy way, there is probably no cause for
   Another psychiatric disorder that is       magazine's 25 year history,9 reflecting our   worry. However, if she seems obsessive,
associated with a disturbance of body         cultural preoccupation with an ever more      secretive or guilty about her eating, begins
image is Body Dysmorphic Disorder             muscular male physique. Boys and men          to have physical symptoms such as loss of
(BDD), formerly Dysmorphophobia.              with extreme body dissatisfaction are at      menstruation, or loses more than 10% of
This disorder has been described in the       risk to develop a form of body dysmorphic     her body weight, professional help should
world psychiatric literature for more than    disorder known as muscle dysmorphia.          be obtained. The first step is a thorough
a century, and has been studied sys-          Previously termed reverse anorexia,         medical evaluation by a pediatrician or
tematically in the United States since the    muscle dysmorphia involves a preoccu-         family practitioner to rule out any medical
mid-1990s. BDD, an intense preoccu-           pation with the idea that one's body is not   cause(s) of weight loss. The next step is a
pation with an imagined or slight defect      sufficiently lean and muscular.10 The         referral to a child and adolescent psychi-
in one's appearance, appears to have its      thoughts are intrusive and associated with    atrist for a complete psychiatric examina-
onset in adolescence or young adulthood       a great deal of anxiety, and the activities   tion. The most common treatments reco-
and often coexists with other psychiatric     (i.e. weight lifting) can be so time-         mmended are a combination of individual
conditions such as social anxiety             consuming that school, work and social        therapy, family therapy and nutritional
disorder, obsessive-compulsive disorder       life are pushed aside. Muscle dysmorphia      counseling. Psychotropic medication,
and atypical depression. In the largest       involves a distortion in perception, where    most commonly antidepressants, are often
study of DSM IV-defined BDD to date,          the level of muscle mass is underestimated.   prescribed, especially if there are co-
the mean age of onset was 16.4 +/- 6.9        Individuals with muscle dysmorphia are        existing psychiatric conditions such as
years.8 The following is a typical case       more likely to engage in such dangerous       depression. Unlike the teen with anorexia,
history of an adolescent with BDD:            behaviors as steroid use.                     the teen with bulimia is usually of normal
education  clinical care  professional training  scientific research  school outreach  information update
weight or even slightly heavier. Thus, buli-    target prevention efforts at the younger     REFERENCES
mia can be harder to detect; adolescents         age groups, as cases of anorexia in pre-     1. The 1997 Body Image Survey Results. Psychology
with bulimia tend to binge and purge in          teenagers have increased.                       Today. Jan-Feb, 1997.
secret. Some clues might include: missing                                                     2. Brumberg, JJ (1997) The Body Project. New
food, hoarding food, evidence of vomiting      How Parents Can Help                              York: Random House.
and over-the-counter emetics and laxatives                                                    3. Cash, T (Ed.) (1990) Body Images: Development,
                                                 What about those teens who have
in the household.12 If a teen is thought to                                                      Deviance and Change. New York: The Guilford
                                               milder forms of body image distress?              Press.
be binging and purging, professional help
                                               Parents should:
should be sought. As with anorexia,                                                           4. Rosenblum, GD & Lewis, M (1999) The
consultation with a child and adolescent                                                         relations among body image, physical
                                                help adolescents realize that they are          attractiveness and body mass in adolescence.
psychiatrist who is trained in the eva-                                                          Child Development. 70, 50-64.
                                                 valued because they are unique, not
luation and treatment of eating disorders
                                                 because of appearance or thinness,           5. Jovanovic J, Lerner, R & Lerner J (1989)
is a good first step. Commonly prescribed                                                        Objective and subjective attractiveness and early
treatments include individual psycho-           accept their children's developing              adolescent adjustment. Journal of Adolescence.
therapy, group therapy and/or family                                                             12, 225-229.
                                                 sexuality and encourage open
therapy. As with anorexia, treatment with        expression of feeling,                       6. American Psychiatric Association (1994) Diag-
various psychotropic medications, most                                                           nostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders,
                                                                                                 Fourth Edition (DSM-IV). Washington, D.C.:
commonly antidepressants, can provide a         discuss with their children the empha-          American Psychiatric Press.
useful adjunct to therapy.                       sis that society places on appearance
                                                                                              7. Steiner Adair C., The body politic: Normal female
                                                 and encourage them to be critical of            adolescent development and the development of
   Treatment for Body Dysmorphic Disor-          advertising claims and the media,               eating disorders. Journal of the American Academy
der generally involves a combination of                                                          of Psychoanalysis. 14, 95-114.
pharmacotherapy and cognitive/behavi-           praise their children's positive abilities   8. Phillips, KA, McElroy, SL, Hudson JI, Pope, HG
oral psychotherapy to correct underlying         and talents,                                    Jr. (1995) Body dysmorphic disorder: An OCD-
                                                                                                 spectrum disorder, a form of affective spectrum
cognitive distortions. Treatment for                                                             disorder or both? Journal of Clinical Psychiatry.
                                                monitor negative comments about
muscle dysmorphia has not been                                                                   56(suppl), 41-51.
                                                 their own bodies.
systematically studied, but the paradigms                                                     9. Leit, RA (2001) The media's representation of the
used to treat BDD and the eating disorders                                                       ideal male body: A cause for muscle dysmorphia?
                                               Summary                                           Dissertation Abstracts International: Section B:
can provide a framework. In this case, the
                                                   Concerns about body image range from          The Sciences and Engineering. 61 (8-B).
treatment of muscle dysmorphia would
                                               a normal desire to look attractive to a        10.Olivardo, R (2001) Mirror, mirror on the wall,
involve a combination of psychoeducation,
                                               pathological concern with thinness or            who's the largest of them all? The features and
cognitive/behavioral therapy and possibly                                                       phenomenology of muscle dysmorphia. Harvard
                                               physical perfection. Today, more than ever,
a serotonin-reuptake inhibitor (SSRI) if                                                        Review of Psychiatry. 9, 254-259.
                                               adolescents in America are prone to body
depression or obsessions and compulsions
                                               image distortions and dissatisfaction. The     11.Halmi, KA (1997) Models to conceptualize risk
are a prominent part of the disorder.                                                           factors for bulimia nervosa. Archives of General
                                               reasons for this are multiple and include 1)     Psychiatry. 54, 507-508.
                                               a discrepancy between adolescents per-
How Schools Can Help                           ception      of   their    own      physical   12.Pruitt, DB (Ed.) (1999) American Academy of
                                                                                                Child and Adolescent Psychiatry: Your
                                               characteristics and the expectations of          Adolescent. New York: HarperResource.
  Middle school efforts should:
                                               their social environment, 2) the influence
 focus on enhancing students aware-          of the media and cultural expectations,        RELATED ARTICLES
  ness of their bodies by providing            and 3) genetic and biological vulnerability.
                                                                                              About Body Dysmorphic Disorder
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                                               ABOUT THE AUTHOR                               About Obsessive Compulsive Disorders
 encourage discussions on sociocultural          Naomi Weinshenker, M.D., Assistant          AboutOurKids.org/articles/about_ocd.html
  factors such as worship of thinness and      Professor of Clinical Psychiatry at the
  muscularity,                                 NYU School of Medicine, is the Director        Developing Healthy Eating Behaviors
                                                                                              AboutOurKids.org/articles/eatingtips.html
                                               of the Young Adult Inpatient Program at
 provide students with information            Tisch Hospital and on the faculty of the
  about the medical consequences of                                                           Mirror Mirror on the Wall: How to Raise
                                               NYU Child Study Center. Her clinical and       Girls with Healthy Self-Esteem
  dieting, binging and purging. Many are       research interests include Body Dysmor-
  not aware of the serious physical conse-                                                    AboutOurKids.org/articles/mirror.html
                                               phic Disorder, anxiety disorders and the
  quences of using diuretics or laxatives,     psychosocial aspects of obesity. She is a      Seminal Issues in the Treatment of Eating
  or other myriad dangers of an                frequent contributor to print and tele-        Disorders
  extremely limited diet,                      vision media.                                  AboutOurKids.org/articles/halmi.html