2015
DOI: 10.1080/10640266.2015.1118958
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Including the excluded: Males and gender minorities in eating disorder prevention

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Cited by 38 publications
(35 citation statements)
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“…Further, research consistently validates that men avoid healthcare screenings (i.e., secondary prevention) due to fear, lack of awareness, or low perceived threat (i.e., "it cannot happen to me"), thus lessening the cost benefits associated with early detection. 19 Lastly, tertiary prevention often does occur for many men; however, the issue with this form of engagement is that it often is very costly, invasive, and more often than not, lacks restorative abilities. 17 Tertiary prevention (i.e., palliative care), often serves as a touchpoint where men have to engage the health care system due to declining health and ability.…”
Section: Originsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Further, research consistently validates that men avoid healthcare screenings (i.e., secondary prevention) due to fear, lack of awareness, or low perceived threat (i.e., "it cannot happen to me"), thus lessening the cost benefits associated with early detection. 19 Lastly, tertiary prevention often does occur for many men; however, the issue with this form of engagement is that it often is very costly, invasive, and more often than not, lacks restorative abilities. 17 Tertiary prevention (i.e., palliative care), often serves as a touchpoint where men have to engage the health care system due to declining health and ability.…”
Section: Originsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, eating disorders are also thought to be stereotypically a "female" problem, and many men receive late diagnosis or do not receive a diagnosis at all. Although this in itself is problematic, for Frank, it is even more so because members of the LGBTQ community are at high risk of developing eating disorders (Cohn et al 2016). Thus, although Frank's identification as male may be seen as advantageous in the traditional intersectional context, in this case, it may disadvantage him unless his physician recognizes (1) the potential biases in how she considers Frank's diagnosis and (2) Frank's intersectional identity.…”
Section: Case Threementioning
confidence: 99%
“…If asked, researchers have excluded transgender individuals from substantive data analyses due to statistical considerations stemming from the (typically) very small number of said individuals recruited into research samples. To some extent, this progression parallels the historical neglect of cisgender males in the eating disorders field, who were also regularly excluded from eating disorders research [12,13]. Beyond inclusion, the issue of gender extends to the development of eating disorder measurement instruments and diagnostic criteria, which were largely developed and evaluated with samples of (cisgender) females.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%