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Miss America may set unhealthy weight standard

NEW YORK, March 22
By Alan Mozes


Miss America is often thought of as a role model for young women. But the weight of the reigning Miss America has been falling for decades, leading researchers to suggest that winning contestants in the most well known and widely viewed beauty pageant in the United States now show signs of being undernourished.

Over the last decade, concern has been growing in the medical community over the continued presence and promotion of underweight women in the media -- particularly as it promotes the development of poor body image and eating disorders among adolescent girls.

In a letter published in the March 22nd issue of The Journal of the American Medical Association, two researchers from the Johns Hopkins School of Public Health in Baltimore, Maryland, report the findings from a review of the archives from the Miss America Pageant, which covered the period 1922 to 1999.

The investigators note the presence of a clear decline in body weight among the pageant winners over the course of the nearly 80 years of competition. In effect, a 12% drop in weight accompanied a less than 2% increase in height during that time frame, rendering many of the beauty winners nutritional losers.

The researchers note that the enduring popularity of the pageant among TV viewers in the US means that the venue is still a powerful example of a media outlet dispensing society's 'ideal of beauty.' They point out that although deemed politically incorrect by some, the pageant was watched by over 10 million viewers in 1999 and ranked 11th in the Nielsen Research ratings among prime-time programs. As such, the research team suggests that the event retains the power to perhaps negatively influence the aesthetic aspirations of adolescent girls -- 50% to 70% of whom have been found in some recent studies to be unhappy with their weight and body image.

In an interview with Reuters Health, Allison Field, an associate epidemiologist at Brigham and Women's Hospital and an instructor at Harvard Medical School in Boston, Massachusetts, aid that while the data review highlighted one aspect of the critical image problem girls face in the media, it focused on a once-yearly event that pales in comparison to the daily influence of magazines, newspapers, film and TV.

'The findings may be very striking, but probably stronger images that would have a stronger impact would be on TV and in movies than in beauty pageants because it's a one-time event versus images girls are seeing everyday,' Field stated.

Field also cautioned that this type of study has limitations in that none of the pageant winners were actually interviewed to assess their views on how much influence media imagery had on their own sense of body image while they were in competition. 'It's a weak study design because you don't ask people directly,' she noted, 'and it's a throwback to an old method of measuring changes over time by solely looking at data and tying it to images. It doesn't ask how directly influenced the girls have been by images of weight.'

However, Field noted that the concern the study raises -- as well as the attention it focuses -- on the power the media has to shape the self-image of an adolescent girl is valid and important. She pointed out that what girls see in their immediate environment and what they see in the media often conflict. 'The American population in general is getting heavier and heavier, so there's a very large discrepancy between body weight -- which is growing larger and larger -- and what people are seeing in media images.'

This discrepancy has been documented in interview-based studies Field herself has conducted, which she said have clearly shown a reinforcing relationship between media portrayals of ideal beauty -- whether through beauty pageants or film and magazines -- and an adolescent girl's sense of dissatisfaction with her body.

'In the research we've conducted, we followed girls over a one-year time period and we found the more likely they wanted to look like the figures they see in the media, the more likely they were to put effort into purging over a one-year time period -- using laxatives and vomiting,' Field added. And, while not all girls fall victim to poor body image via media influence, some will. 'There are many girls concerned with their weight, and a minority will use an unhealthy way to control it.'

 

SOURCE: The Journal of the American Medical Association 2000;283:1569.




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