OBJECTIVE: The aim of the study was to determine incidence and
prevalence rates and long-term trends in incidence of anorexia nervosa by
identifying all persons residing in the community of Rochester, Minn.,
during the 50-year period 1935 through 1984 who had the disorder. METHOD:
From a community-based epidemiologic resource, 13,559 medical records with
diagnoses of amenorrhea, starvation, weight loss, anorexia nervosa, or
other conditions were screened to identify true cases of anorexia nervosa
determined by using standard diagnostic criteria. RESULTS: One hundred
eighty-one residents (166 female and 15 male) fulfilled the diagnostic
criteria for anorexia nervosa; these were the incidence cases. Due to a
quadratic trend in the rates for girls 10-19 years old, the incidence rate
among female residents fell from 16.6 per 100,000 person-years in the
1935-1939 period to a low of 7.0 in 1950-1954 and increased to 26.3 in
1980-1984. The incidence rates for women 20 years old and older and for
males remained constant. For females 15-24 years old, there was a linear
increase. The overall age-adjusted incidence rate per 100,000 person-years
was 14.6 for females and 1.8 for males. The prevalence rate per 100,000
population was 269.9 for females and 22.5 for males. CONCLUSIONS: Anorexia
nervosa is more common than previously recognized. Among girls 15-19 years
old it is a very common chronic illness. Its incidence has increased among
females 15-24 years old but not among older women or among males.Abstract Teaser