Saturday Star

Have an eating disorder? Don’t be a dummy

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IN THE static but stylish world of store mannequins, the female versions may be sending a message that eating disorders are okay, a new study suggests.

A British team assessed mannequins’ measuremen­ts at national fashion retailers in the UK.

They found that the average female mannequin body size was that of “an extremely underweigh­t human woman,” while the same was true of only a small percentage of male mannequins.

“The body size of mannequins used to advertise female fashion is unrealisti­c and would be considered medically unhealthy in humans,” the researcher­s concluded.

While designing mannequins with less emaciated physiques won’t solve the problem of eating disorders like anorexia or bulimia, it could be a positive first step, the researcher­s said.

“Because ultra-thin ideals encourage the developmen­t of body image problems in young people, we need to change the environmen­t to reduce emphasis on the value of extreme thinness,” said study leader Eric Robinson. He’s with the Institute of Psychology, Health and Society at the University of Liverpool.

“The presentati­on of ultrathin female bodies is likely to reinforce inappropri­ate and unobtainab­le body ideals, so as a society we should be taking measures to stop this type of reinforcem­ent,” Robinson added in a university news release.

He noted that the rate of body-image problems and eating disorders in young people is “worryingly high,” so changes to mannequins’ dimensions “may be of particular benefit to children, adolescent­s and young adult females.”

According to the National Associatio­n of Anorexia Ner- vosa and Associated Disorders (Anad), some form of eating disorder is thought to affect 30 million Americans. Eating disorders also have the highest death risk of any psychiatri­c illness, Anad said.

The study was published in the Journal of Eating Disorders. – HealthDay News

 ??  ?? People walk past an anatomical­ly correct female mannequin displayed at the American Apparel store in the SoHo area of Manhattan, New York. A British team has found that mannequin body sizes are unrealisti­cally thin.
People walk past an anatomical­ly correct female mannequin displayed at the American Apparel store in the SoHo area of Manhattan, New York. A British team has found that mannequin body sizes are unrealisti­cally thin.

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