摘要:一项调查显示,大约51%的年轻女性希望通过手术来改善容貌,三分之一已经是12号尺码(英式,相当于大号)的妇女仍然认为自己过胖,几乎半数受访女性表示,她们曾放弃一餐来减肥,而8%的人曾通过让自己呕吐来减肥。
Some 51% of young women would have surgery to improve their looks and a third of those who are a size 12 think
they are overweight, a survey suggests.
BBC Radio 1's Newsbeat asked 25,000 people, mostly aged 17 to 34, how they felt about their bodies.
Almost half the women surveyed said they had skipped a meal to lose weight, while 8% had made themselves sick.
Eating disorder experts said it was "sad but not surprising" that young people felt and acted in such ways.
The survey found two thirds of those who are size 14 also thought they were overweight or fat.
Even with the celebrity emphasis on being size zero (UK size four), fewer than one in a hundred of those surveyed said they were that size.
Given the choice of ultra-skinny, thin and curvaceous, both men and women rated a curvy Martine McCutcheon as having the best body.
Half of the women questioned said there was "lots they would change" about their bodies--and more than 10% "hated" what they looked like.
Many people said they were trying to change their looks.
More than 20% of female respondents said that they were on a diet, compared with fewer than 10% of men.
And more than 50% of female respondents said they would consider having plastic surgery, compared with less than a quarter of men.
Breast enlargement was the most popular operation for women, while liposuction was the next most popular.
Liposuction and nose jobs were the most common choices for men.
The online survey found that even younger people had concerns over their looks.
More than half of girls aged 12 to 16 felt that their body image either stops them from getting a boyfriend or from relaxing in a relationship.
Young men also appear to feel the pressure to look good.
About 20% of those in their early 20s said that they have taken protein supplements in a bid to help themselves bulk up, compared with 11% of over 35s.
And when asked to rate photos of differently shaped male bodies, almost 80% of men and 65% of women favoured a very muscular physique.
A spokeswoman for Beating Eating Disorders said there were an estimated 1.1 million people in the UK with eating disorders.
"Research says that typical age of onset for an eating disorder is 14 to 25. Young people are affected by many issues at this present time with issues such as exams, bullying, family pressures.