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Published byHelen Lester Modified over 9 years ago
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What Causes Eating Disorders? No single cause for eating disorders - involves several complex factors Cultural Pressures – being extremely thin is the standard of beauty Psychological Issues – Low self-esteem, Depression, Need for control, etc Family Environment – pressure from parents/siblings Life transitions - moving
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Who Does it Effect? Both men and women 9/10 cases are found among girls and young women Males account for 5 – 10 % of bulimia and anorexia cases
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Types of Eating Disorders Anorexia Nervosa Bulimia Nervosa Binge Eating Compulsive Overeating
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Anorexia Nervosa Characterized by: self-starvation excessive exercising excessive weight loss need to control their surroundings and emotions.
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Anorexia Nervosa refusal to keep body weight at or above what’s healthy feeling overweight despite dramatic weight loss loss of menstrual periods Osteoporosis – loss of bone mass extreme preoccupation with body weight and shape
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Bulimia Nervosa Binge eating- eating a large quantity of food in a short period of time Then purge by using laxatives or forcing vomiting Feeling out of control while eating. Exercising excessively Frequent dieting.
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Using Laxatives Laxatives do NOT make you lose weight Empties only the colon – mainly losing water! Chronic use results in : Severe abdominal pain Lose control of rectum = anal leakage Bloating Dehydration
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Truth or Myth? The causes of eating disorders are complex and involve social, psychological and genetic factors Eating disorders are most common among teens and young adults. The three most common eating disorders are anorexia nervosa, bulimia nervosa and binge eating People with anorexia or bulimia may over exercise. There are no cases of males with eating disorders
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Truth or Myth? Treatments of eating disorders involve several different health professionals Eating disorders can result in serious health consequences including death Some athletes are susceptible to eating disorders due to their training regimens Men are more likely than women to seek help for eating disorders The pressures of a culture that promotes “thinness” and the “perfect body” contribute to causing eating disorders.
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