Overview

An eating disorder is a compulsion to eat, or avoid eating, that negatively affects both one's physical and mental health. Eating disorders are all encompassing. They affect every part of the person's life. According to the authors of Surviving an Eating Disorder, "feelings about work, school, relationships, day-to-day activities and one's experience of emotional well being are determined by what has or has not been eaten or by a number on a scale." Anorexia nervosa and bulimia nervosa are the most common eating disorders generally recognized by medical classification schemes, with a significant diagnostic overlap between the two. Together, they affect an estimated 5-7% of females in the United States during their lifetimes. There is a third type of eating disorder currently being investigated and defined - Binge Eating Disorder. This is a chronic condition that occurs when an individual consumes huge amounts of food during a brief period of time and feels totally out of control and unable to stop their eating. It can lead to serious health conditions such as morbid obesity, diabetes, hypertension, and cardiovascular disease.

Saturday, July 4, 2009

Eating Disorders - A Silent Killer

Medical science has allowed medical and healthcare professionals to identify most, if not all disorders that plague humanity today. In many cases, the disorders inflict a great many number of people that it actually becomes commonly known, and therefore launches equally common known cures and treatments, which become quite popular with people easily. Some examples are the common byproducts of life today such as anxiety and depression.

The world we live in today can create so much stress for a person that it actually promotes the development of a disorder. This stress may also partially be blamed for the proliferation of the eating disorders among people. Many may not realize just how prevalent eating disorders can be amongst people, since it is not really a disorder that many address, at least not as popularly as depression and anxiety issues are addressed.

A recent study has shown that at least .5% of women and even .05% of men will manifest certain characteristics of anorexia nervosa at one point during their lives, with some of the people bearing the characteristics actually developing a full blown case of the disorder. A greater number of women, at least 3%, may manifest characteristics of bulimia at one point during their lives. Binge eating, however, remains the most prevalent eating disorder of all, being present in at least 2% of all living adults at any given time.

What is alarming, however, is the fact that the number of people suffering from the various eating disorders appear to be rising slowly but steadily over the years. Since first being documented and established as a disorder, the cases of people suffering from one form of eating disorder or another have more than tripled in number. This is quite alarming since there have been immense developments in the methods of treatment of the various physical and mental disorders known to man, and yet the number of people suffering from eating disorders appear to be on the rise, instead of decreasing.

In most cases, eating disorders appear to manifest more commonly in women than in men, as shown by studies in the field, where only about 10% of all patients diagnosed with eating disorders are men. Some contend, however, that this figure may never be accurately validated, since it is an established fact that people suffering from eating disorders have a knack of being totally secretive about it and will deny ever having it, much less seek help for their disorder, which has led doctors and medical professionals to speculate that there may actually be a bigger percentage of people with eating disorders that are unaccounted for, and thus, untreated.

Statistically, there have been much more people which have come out and sought medical help in treating sexually transmitted diseased or venereal diseases than people who have an eating disorder.

Most of people known to have eating disorders usually start manifesting it around the time of adolescence or even early adulthood. This condition is made worse by the fact that the transition between adolescence and adulthood is particularly fraught with much stress for the people going through that period. While there are no clear cut indicators as to what particular events trigger the development of an eating disorder in a person, it is generally attributed to instances wherein the person is subjected to much stress and anxiety, as in instances of violence, intense conflict, great physical stress, burgeoning peer pressure and even a lack of emotional support from the people the person expects support from.



Autor: Paul Aragones

If you want to know more about eating disorders and what options you have to treat it, you can visit this link http://eatingdisordertreatmentoptions.blogspot.com/.


Added: July 4, 2009
Source: http://ezinearticles.com/

1 comment:

Jeannie said...

I definitely agree that the incidence of eating disorders is definitely on the rise. But the increase in eating disorders isn't just occurring in teens and young women. A growing number of people developing eating disorders are over 40, even many women in their 50's and 60's. Stress related events are many in this age range. Children leave home, 50% of all women in their 50's are widowed or divorced, financial difficulties, increasing health problems, parents and friends beginning to die -- all of these contributing to the need to use something to cope with the tremendous stress.

Older women are also faced with these fabulous looking older women such as Jane Fonda and Mariel Hemminway -- women who are fit and vital and young looking for their ages.

Hopefully through much, much more awareness and education we can teach people that it's really OK and beautiful to be who they are with their spirits shining through.

Jeanne Rust, PhD
CEO/Founder Mirasol
www.mirasol.net
www.edrecovery.com