Prevalence of bulimia among secondary school students in Casablanca
Author: Ghazal N, Agoub M, Moussaoui D, Battas
Source:
L'Encephale, 27(4), 338-342.
During the two last decades, several epidemiological studies have been conducted
on bulimia nervosAccording to recent studies, prevalence rates were estimated
to be 1%. There are a very few studies on eating behaviour conducted in Arab
countries. The aims of the current study were to assess prospectively the
prevalence of Bulimia Nervosa and its characteristics in a Moroccan context in a
randomly selected and representative sample of students attending six secondary
schools in CasablancA second group composed of the students of the French
secondary school of Casablanca was included in the survey in order to verify the
influence of socio-cultural factors. Subjects completed a sociodemographic
questionnaire and the Bulimic Investigatory Test of Edinburgh (BITE), a 33-item
self-report measure of both the symptoms and severity of bulimia nervosA score
of 25 or higher suggests a bulimic syndrome; 2,044 subjects returned their
questionnaires (participation rate = 75.8%). The group of Moroccan school
included 1,887 subjects and the French school 157 subjects. Females were
preponderant (59%). The mean age was 18.3 +/- 1.2 years (15-22 years). For the
first group, at least one substance was taken by 290 (15.3%) students: 12.7% were
addicted to tobacco and 5.7% consumed occasionally alcohol. 16.3% reported a
familial history of disturbed eating behaviour. According to the BITE, the
overall prevalence of bulimia was 0.8% (1.2% in female and 0.1 in male subjects).
The mean age of bulimic subjects was 18.6 +/- 1.7 years (16-24 years). The only
male case in our sample was aged 24 years, without personal nor familial
psychiatric history, consumed regularly tobacco and alcohol. His BITE symptoms
score was 20 and severity score was 17, the highest score in our sample. Analyses
of correlates of bulimia nervosa in the Moroccan sample showed that the group of
bulimic subjects did not differ from the non bulimic with regard to any
sociodemographic characteristics except sex: the female sex was predominant (p <
0.005) with 14 cases, the prevalence of bulimic syndrome was 1.2% among girls.
This prevalence was 0.1% among boys. The bulimic subjects have regularly used
different compensatory behaviours to control their weight: 6 (33.3%) used
appetite suppressants, 3 (16.6%) used diuretics and 4 (22.2%) were engaged in
self-induced vomiting. In the group of the french school, the prevalence of
bulimia was 1.9% in the whole sample (3.4% among girls and no case among boys).
These results are comparable to those reported recently in occidental countries
and in an Egyptian study. However, the prevalence of bulimic syndrome in our
sample was lower to those reported in countries with similar culture. The
elevated prevalence of 10% reported in a tunisian study could be explained by the
composition of the sample (medical students, aged 22-28 years) and the cut-off
point for the BITE was determined to be 20 without taking into account severity
criteriA South African survey, conducted on 1,435 college students
representing South Africa's ethnically and culturally diverse population
comparable to our sample regarding the age (17-25 years), found a prevalence of
5% with a cut-off of 25 in the BITE. The majority of epidemiological
community-based studies estimated the prevalence of bulimia nervosa to be 1 to 3%
according to the diagnostic instruments used (self-report questionnaires versus
clinical interviews) and the diagnostic criterias operationalized (DSM III, III-R
or IV). The rate of occurrence of this disorder in males usually one-tenth of
that in females was more decreased among our sample. However, the prevalence
among males was comparable to the data of literature. Except the sex, we did not
find other risk factors identified in the previous papers. Although in the
bulimic group, we noted a higher rate of substance abuse (26.6% versus 15.2%, p >
0.5), familial histories of disturbed eatin