Objective: Although binge eating has been recognized as a clinically relevant behavior among the obese for more than four decades, the concept of binge eating disorder (BED) as a distinct psychiatric diagnosis is of much more recent origin. This article presents four ways of conceptualizing BED: a distinct disorder in its own right, as a variant of bulimia nervosa, as a useful behavioral subtype of obesity, and as a behavior that reflects psychopathology among the obese. It also summarizes the evidence supporting and disconfirming each model.
Method: The literature subsequent to the development of DSM-IV regarding the reliability and validity of BED and related conditions was reviewed selectively.
Results: The preponderance of the evidence suggests that BED differs importantly from purging bulimia nervosa and that BED is not a strikingly useful behavioral subtype of obesity.
Discussion: Further study is needed to definitively determine the validity of BED as a distinct eating disorder.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/eat.10201 | DOI Listing |
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