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EATING DISORDER IN CHILDREN

Authors :
Mariam Mohammed Alrsheedy, Hoda Jehad Abousada
Halah Abdul Rahman Hafiz, Wed Mohammed Alluhaibi
Maram Mohammed Alateeq
Bakry, Maria Ahmed
Bashaer Azhari Alazhari, Fatma Mohammed Babdullah
Abdulrahman Ibn Al Muataz Ezzi, Saad Saud Alotaibi
Abdullah Ali Hamdi, Manar Abdullah Aljohar
Abdulaziz Awadh Alrashdi, Mohammed Abdullah Albesher and Sarah Ismail Marzouk
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Zenodo, 2022.

Abstract

Background:Evidence-based treatment and service design should reflect the perspectives of parents with eating disorders among their children on useful parts of care, but there is a lack of data to do so.This research aimed in assessing the effects of eating disorders that are prevailing among children in a detailed perspective. Methods:This research work involved following a cross-sectional approach of study and therefore included collecting first-hand data. This was accomplished through the conduction of the survey and data that are considered through the conduction of the survey are quantitative in nature. This would help in enhanced perception of the eating disorders that are prevailing in children. The method that would be employed for considering the size of the sample is stratified random sampling. The survey involved conducting a survey of children who falls within the age range of 10-17years of age. Results:The study included 572 children. Most of parents are concerned about the change in the eating disorder among their children (n= 420, 73.4%). Most of parents believe that eating habits can affect the rising in eating disorders (n= 486, 85%). Furthermore, parents think that reducing oily and junk food may help in minimizing eating disorders among their children (n= 456, 79.7%). Their most frequent answer was loss of appetite (n= 241, 42.1%). Figure 1 shows the distribution of parents answers. In addition, parents responded that it is minimal painful to lead a life with an excessively heavyweight (n= 228, 39.9%). They answered low-carbohydrate content food with no sugar (n= 253, 44.2%) while green vegetables came in the second place (n= 209, 36.5%) followed by fruits (n= 110, 19.2%). Conclusion:The studys findings revealed that the most common symptom reported by youngsters with eating disorders was a decrease in appetite. Parents said it hurt just somewhat to have to care for an overweight child all the time. The ideal option, according to parents, is meals with minimal carbohydrate content and no added sugar. According to parent reports, a healthy diet is the most effective weapon against childhood eating problems. &nbsp

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4664a363981eabd7611b107987a4a0f6
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7536750