Eating disorders tend to affect those assigned female at birth more often, but anyone can have eating disorders.
Young athletes tend to be at a greater risk of having an eating disorder if they play sports that focus on personal performance, appearance, diet, and weight requirements. Such competitive sports include:
- Swimming and diving
- Bodybuilding
- Wrestling
- Gymnastics
- Running
- Dancing
- Figure skating
- Rowing (crew)
- Beach volleyball
These factors can increase the risk that a young athlete will develop an eating disorder:
- Participating in an individual, rather than a team sport, such as gymnastics or swimming
- Basing personal identity and self-worth solely on athletic performance
- Having performance anxiety
- Having a negative view of personal athletic achievement
- Having the mistaken idea that being thinner makes you a better athlete
- Having a coach who focuses on appearance, competition, and success rather than sportsmanship and the whole person
- Having suffered physical or sexual abuse or another trauma
- Having low self-esteem
- Feeling family or peer pressure to be thin
- Having family members with eating disorders
- Dieting constantly