NEW YORK, Sept. 12, 2008

Not-Quite-So-Thin Is In At Fashion Week

Designers Taking "Healthier Approach" In Choosing Models

  • At New York Fashion Week, models were up to sizes 2 and 4 - not 0, according to Nian Fish, chair of a fashion designers health initiative.

    At New York Fashion Week, models were up to sizes 2 and 4 - not 0, according to Nian Fish, chair of a fashion designers health initiative.  (AP Photo/Richard Drew)

(CBS)  Young girls can now see more realistic shapes on television, from the Dove Campaign for Real Beauty to the plus-size winner on "America's Next Top Model." And models have largely disappeared from the covers of magazines, replaced by celebrities who generate their own is-she-too-thin headlines.

But that doesn't mean models aren't influencing girls and women.

Carol Weston, advice columnist for Girls' Life Magazine, said she gets letters from tween girls who want to models or are looking for weight-loss advice. Modeling "seems so glamorous," she said.

She said many teenagers confess that they starve themselves, purge
or use diet pills.

Eating disorders groups have recommended requiring adult models to have a body mass index of at least 18.5 - the lower limits of a normal weight - and an independent medical certification affirming that they do not suffer from an eating disorder.

"They do drug testing for sports. Why? To keep competition clean but hopefully also to save lives. That's what we want, too," said Lynn Grefe, CEO of the National Eating Disorders Association.

But such measures are called Draconian by Dr. Susan Ice, a medical director for an eating disorders treatment center and member of the Council of Fashion Designers of America health initiative.

For now, the goal is simply to raise awareness, said CFDA president Diane von Furstenberg.

"I think that it's a good thing to do it the way we're doing it as opposed to throwing those poor girls on a scale and terrifying them even more," she said.

Because of the initiative, some models were identified as having an eating disorder, referred for treatment and are back on the runways, Fish said. Some who didn't look healthy weren't used.

There has been some pressure for designers to increase their model size to a 6, but the designers prefer models whose modest curves don't compete with the clothes, Fish said. London recently dropped its plan to require medical exams for models because of a lack of international support.

"Thin is going to be the ruling look - until someone says, 'I want voluptuous,'" said Fish. "I don't know if that ever is going to come back."

© MMVIII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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