PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Feeling fit, but not fine: ECU study finds gap between athletes’ health perceptions and body satisfaction 

2025-11-11
(Press-News.org) New research from Edith Cowan University (ECU) has revealed a striking disconnect between how recreational athletes perceive their health and fitness, and how they feel about their bodies.  

The research found that while 69 per cent of recreational athletes that participated in a survey considered themselves healthy and 62 per cent believed they were fit, only 26 per cent reported being satisfied with their body weight and shape.  

The findings confirm a concerning trend that athletes, particularly those engaged in regular or structured physical activity, are statistically more likely to experience disordered eating and exercise behaviours than their non-athlete counterparts, ECU’s Dr Valeria Varea said.  

“There is significant research available that shows athletes are at more risk of presenting with eating disorders, compared with non-athletes, particularly those who participate in sports that focus on lean bodies, such as gymnastics, or those that have weight categories.” 

Dr Varea and colleagues noted that 67 per cent of the recreational athletes that participated in the survey also reported feeling some level of anxiety or distress if they did not have access to food that they consider to be healthy, and 88 per cent reported feeling some guilt after eating food they consider to be unhealthy. 

Dr Varea said a focus on fueling the body could potentially translate into eating disorders such as Orthorexia Nervosa (ON), which is a fixation on righteous eating. People experiencing ON become anxious if they do not have access to their specific healthy foods, leading them to feel out of control.  

ON differs from anorexia nervosa and other eating disorders in the way that people who experience it are worried about the quality of the food, rather than the quantity. 

Some athletes are also at risk of Orthorexia Athletica (OA), which is characterised by the compulsive use and abuse of healthy food, and obsessive exercise, as athletes in essence, cross the line from a healthy approach to their eating and training, to an unhealthy obsession with both food and exercise.  

Vice Chancellor's Professorial Research Fellow Professor Dawn Penney affirmed the dual concerns at play.  

“The simultaneous concerns with both quality of food and compulsive exercise are what distinguishes OA from ON where the concern is only with the quality of food. Athletes are regarded as a population group particularly at risk, with several sports and sporting cultures associated with regulated healthy eating regimes, high levels of training and/or a “slim to win” orientation,” Professor Penney said.  

Adding to the complexity, however, is the fact that there is currently no medical diagnosis for either OA or ON, Dr Varea said.  

“There is no way for athletes or recreational exercisers to really know when they are crossing the boundary from healthy eating into ON, or from healthy exercise into OA.” 

Professor Penney said this only further highlighted the need for expanded approaches to education, particularly for everyday athletes participating at the peripheries of, or outside of formal club structures and support.  

“With diversification in how people engage in sport participation and how information about participation is communicated, there is a need for further research to explore how health education can be most effectively framed to minimise incidence and the risks associated with eating and exercise disorders for a broad spectrum of people,” she said.  

 

 

 

- ends -         

     

Media contact: Esmarie Iannucci, Media Advisor, 0405 774 465   

e.iannucci@ecu.edu.au 

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

The flexible brain: How circuit excitability and plasticity shift across the day

2025-11-11
Our brains do not react in a fixed, mechanical way like electronic circuits. Even if we see the same scene every day on our commute to work, what we feel - and whether it leaves a lasting impression - depends on our internal state at that moment. For example, your commute may be a blur if you're too tired to pay attention to your surroundings. The 24-hour cycle that humans naturally follow is one of the factors that shapes the brain's internal environment. These internal physiological cycles arise from ...

New self-heating catalyst cleans antibiotic pollutants from water and soil

2025-11-11
Scientists have developed a fast, energy-efficient method to create an iron-carbon (Fe/C) catalyst that can remove antibiotic pollutants from both water and soil by using oxygen from the air. The study, published in Sustainable Carbon Materials, introduces a self-heating synthesis approach that could pave the way for greener environmental cleanup technologies. Antibiotic residues such as sulfamethoxazole, commonly found in wastewater and agricultural runoff, are a growing environmental concern. These contaminants persist in the environment and ...

Could tiny airborne plastics help viruses spread? Scientists warn of a hidden infection risk

2025-11-11
As plastic pollution worsens worldwide, scientists are uncovering a new and unsettling possibility. Tiny airborne fragments of plastic, known as micro- and nanoplastics, may do more than pollute the air we breathe. They could also help viruses linger and travel farther, potentially influencing how respiratory diseases spread. A commentary published in New Contaminants by Mengjie Wu and Huan Zhong of Nanjing University calls attention to the emerging concern that airborne plastics might act as invisible vehicles for viruses. While plastics ...

Breakthrough in water-based light generation: 1,000-fold enhancement of white-light output using non-harmonic two-color femtosecond lasers

2025-11-11
Scientists at Japan's Institute for Molecular Science have achieved a 1,000-fold enhancement in white-light generation inside water by using non-harmonic two-color femtosecond laser excitation. This previously unexplored approach in liquids unlocks new nonlinear optical pathways, enabling a dramatic boost in supercontinuum generation. The breakthrough lays a foundation for next-generation bioimaging, aqueous-phase spectroscopy, and attosecond science in water. Researchers at the Institute for Molecular ...

Food stamp expansion in 2021 reduced odds of needy US kids going hungry

2025-11-11
The 15% expansion of food stamp payments under the supplemental nutrition assistance program, or SNAP for short, during the COVID-19 pandemic, reduced the odds of needy children going hungry, especially in Hispanic-American and large households, finds research to be published online in the Journal of Epidemiology & Community Health.   The findings are particularly relevant, given the projected 9-10% benefit reductions ($15/household/month) for typical families by 2034 under the terms of the 2025 Reconciliation Bill enacted in July ...

Cash transfers boost health in low- and middle-income countries

2025-11-11
Philadelphia, PA — Large-scale, government-led cash transfer programs drove significant improvements in health outcomes across low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), according to a major new study in The Lancet from researchers at the University of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine. More women received health care early in their pregnancies, more babies were born in health facilities, and more births were attended by trained health workers when governments gave money through cash transfer programs.   Giving cash leads to massive health improvements  Researchers ...

LDL cholesterol improved among veterans in program with health coaches, other resources

2025-11-10
Research Highlights: After 24 months, 34% of veterans who have heart and blood vessel disease and high cholesterol in a quality improvement program that included health care coaches and other resources had improved cholesterol levels to below 70 mg/dL. The quality-improvement program increased the number of military veterans with better LDL (“bad” cholesterol) levels of less than 70mg/dL, and more than a third of those ages 75 and older achieved their lower cholesterol goal. Note: The study featured in this news release is a research abstract. Abstracts ...

New study finds novel link between shared brain-gene patterns and autism symptom severity in children with autism and ADHD

2025-11-10
NEW YORK, NY (November 2025) A new study published in Molecular Psychiatry reveals that the biological underpinnings of autism and ADHD may transcend traditional diagnostic boundaries. While there is increasing appreciation that ADHD and autism often co-occur, the underlying shared biological features have remained largely unknown. Researchers from the Child Mind Institute and collaborating institutions discovered that autism symptom severity, rather than diagnostic classification, corresponds to distinct ...

For Black adults in food deserts, food delivery & dietary guidance reduced blood pressure

2025-11-10
Research Highlights: A grocery support program based on the low-sodium DASH eating plan that included home-delivered groceries and dietary counseling reduced blood pressure levels in Black adults living in areas where grocery stores were inaccessible or scarce, known as food deserts. People who had groceries delivered to their homes and followed guidance from a dietitian for three months had greater improvements in blood pressure and cholesterol levels, compared to a similar group in the same community ...

New research shows how cells orchestrate protein production

2025-11-10
Janelia researchers have uncovered a novel way that two of the structures inside cells—the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and lysosomes—coordinate the production of proteins, highlighting how interactions between organelles are important for regulating cellular processes.  Inside every eukaryotic cell lies a vast and dynamic network known as the ER. Stretching through the cytoplasm, this intricate continuum of tubules, junctions, and cisternal sheets is not a passive scaffold but a hub of biosynthetic activity. The ER’s surfaces pulse with ribosomes—molecular structures that translate ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

How life first got moving: nature’s motor from billions of years ago

The 2nd International Conference on Civil Engineering and Smart Construction (ICCESC 2025)

Hidden catalysis: Abrasion transforms common chemistry equipment into reagents

ASH 2025 tip sheet: Sylvester researchers contribute to more than 35 oral presentations at ASH Annual Meeting

Feeling fit, but not fine: ECU study finds gap between athletes’ health perceptions and body satisfaction 

The flexible brain: How circuit excitability and plasticity shift across the day

New self-heating catalyst cleans antibiotic pollutants from water and soil

Could tiny airborne plastics help viruses spread? Scientists warn of a hidden infection risk

Breakthrough in water-based light generation: 1,000-fold enhancement of white-light output using non-harmonic two-color femtosecond lasers

Food stamp expansion in 2021 reduced odds of needy US kids going hungry

Cash transfers boost health in low- and middle-income countries

LDL cholesterol improved among veterans in program with health coaches, other resources

New study finds novel link between shared brain-gene patterns and autism symptom severity in children with autism and ADHD

For Black adults in food deserts, food delivery & dietary guidance reduced blood pressure

New research shows how cells orchestrate protein production

With family support, adults in rural China reduced blood pressure by average of 10 mm Hg

Effectiveness of anti-clotting meds after stent placement varied in people with diabetes

Stress cardiac MRI tests may help improve angina diagnosis and treatment

Combination pill for heart failure improved heart function, symptoms and quality of life

FDA grants fast track designation to drug combo for colorectal cancer

PCSK9 medication plus statin may help lower cholesterol after heart transplant

Access to healthy foods linked to improved quality of life for adults with heart failure

1 in 8 males undergo scrotal surgery 20 years after kidney donation

NAD⁺ restores memory in Alzheimer’s’ disease models by correcting RNA errors

Talking with our hands: Duke study reveals how culture shapes our gestures

Diet alone doesn’t explain divergent health of California Sea Lions in US and Mexico

Blood-platelet screening in midlife could identify early risk for Alzheimer’s disease

One month of clot prevention after a stent was as effective as year-long course for AFib

Ablation reduces stroke risk for AFib and may remove need for some types of blood thinners

Earlier blood transfusion may reduce heart failure, arrhythmia in adults with heart disease

[Press-News.org] Feeling fit, but not fine: ECU study finds gap between athletes’ health perceptions and body satisfaction