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info on eating disorders
info on eating disorders - Advice For All Forums
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We all have different eating habits. There are a large number of “eating styles” which can allow us to stay healthy. However, there are some which are driven by an intense fear of becoming fat and which actually damage our health. These are called “eating disorders” and involve:
eating too much
eating too little
using harmful ways to get rid of calories.
This leaflet deals with two eating disorders - Anorexia Nervosa and Bulimia Nervosa. It describes the two disorders separately:
the symptoms of anorexia and bulimia are often mixed - some people say that they have "bulimarexia"
the pattern of symptoms can change over time - you may start with anorexic symptoms, but later develop the symptoms of bulimia.
Who gets eating disorders?
Girls and women are 10 times more likely than boys and men to suffer from anorexia or bulimia. However, eating disorders do seem to be getting more common in boys and men. They occur more often in people who have been overweight as children.
Anorexia Nervosa
What are the signs?
You find that you:
worry more and more about your weight
eat less and less
exercise more and more, to burn off calories
can't stop losing weight, even when you are well below a safe weight for your age and height
smoke more or chew gum to keep your weight down height
lose interest in sex
In girls or women - monthly menstrual periods become irregular or stop.
In men or boys - erections and wet dreams stop, testicles shrink.
When does it start?
Usually in the teenage years. It affects around:
1 fifteen-year-old girl in every 150
1 fifteen-year-old boy in every 1000.
It can also start in childhood or in later life.
What happens?
You take in very few calories every day. You eat "healthily" - fruit, vegetables and salads - but they don't give your body enough energy.
You may also exercise, use slimming pills, or smoke more to keep your weight down.
You don't want to eat yourself, but you buy food and cook for other people.
You still get as hungry as ever, in fact you can't stop thinking about food.
You become more afraid of putting on weight, and more determined to keep your weight well below normal.
Your family may be the first to notice your thinness and weight loss.
You may find yourself lying to other people about the amount you are eating and how much weight you are losing.
You may also develop some of the symptoms of bulimia. Unlike someone with Bulimia Nervosa, your weight may continue to be very low.
Bulimia Nervosa
What are the signs?
You find that you:
worry more and more about your weight
binge eat (see page 6)
make yourself vomit and/or use laxatives to get rid of calories
have irregular menstrual periods
feel tired
feel guilty
stay a normal weight, in spite of your efforts to diet.
When does it start?
Bulimia Nervosa often starts in the mid-teens. However, people don't usually seek help for it until their early to mid-twenties because they are able to hide it, even though it affects their work and social life. People most often seek help when their life changes - the start of a new relationship or having to live with other people for the first time.
About 4 out of every 100 women suffers from bulimia at some time in their lives, rather fewer men.
Bingeing
You raid the fridge or go out and buy lots of fattening foods that you would normally avoid. You then go back to your room, or home, and eat it all, quickly, in secret. You might get through packets of biscuits, several boxes of chocolates and a number of cakes in just a couple of hours. You may even take someone else’s food, or shoplift, to satisfy the urge to binge.
Afterwards you feel stuffed and bloated – and probably guilty and depressed. You try to get rid of the food you have eaten by making yourself sick, or by purging with laxatives. It is very uncomfortable and tiring, but you find yourself trapped in a routine of binge eating, and vomiting and/or purging.
info on eating disorders - Advice For All Forums
------------------------------------------------------------------
We all have different eating habits. There are a large number of “eating styles” which can allow us to stay healthy. However, there are some which are driven by an intense fear of becoming fat and which actually damage our health. These are called “eating disorders” and involve:
eating too much
eating too little
using harmful ways to get rid of calories.
This leaflet deals with two eating disorders - Anorexia Nervosa and Bulimia Nervosa. It describes the two disorders separately:
the symptoms of anorexia and bulimia are often mixed - some people say that they have "bulimarexia"
the pattern of symptoms can change over time - you may start with anorexic symptoms, but later develop the symptoms of bulimia.
Who gets eating disorders?
Girls and women are 10 times more likely than boys and men to suffer from anorexia or bulimia. However, eating disorders do seem to be getting more common in boys and men. They occur more often in people who have been overweight as children.
Anorexia Nervosa
What are the signs?
You find that you:
worry more and more about your weight
eat less and less
exercise more and more, to burn off calories
can't stop losing weight, even when you are well below a safe weight for your age and height
smoke more or chew gum to keep your weight down height
lose interest in sex
In girls or women - monthly menstrual periods become irregular or stop.
In men or boys - erections and wet dreams stop, testicles shrink.
When does it start?
Usually in the teenage years. It affects around:
1 fifteen-year-old girl in every 150
1 fifteen-year-old boy in every 1000.
It can also start in childhood or in later life.
What happens?
You take in very few calories every day. You eat "healthily" - fruit, vegetables and salads - but they don't give your body enough energy.
You may also exercise, use slimming pills, or smoke more to keep your weight down.
You don't want to eat yourself, but you buy food and cook for other people.
You still get as hungry as ever, in fact you can't stop thinking about food.
You become more afraid of putting on weight, and more determined to keep your weight well below normal.
Your family may be the first to notice your thinness and weight loss.
You may find yourself lying to other people about the amount you are eating and how much weight you are losing.
You may also develop some of the symptoms of bulimia. Unlike someone with Bulimia Nervosa, your weight may continue to be very low.
Bulimia Nervosa
What are the signs?
You find that you:
worry more and more about your weight
binge eat (see page 6)
make yourself vomit and/or use laxatives to get rid of calories
have irregular menstrual periods
feel tired
feel guilty
stay a normal weight, in spite of your efforts to diet.
When does it start?
Bulimia Nervosa often starts in the mid-teens. However, people don't usually seek help for it until their early to mid-twenties because they are able to hide it, even though it affects their work and social life. People most often seek help when their life changes - the start of a new relationship or having to live with other people for the first time.
About 4 out of every 100 women suffers from bulimia at some time in their lives, rather fewer men.
Bingeing
You raid the fridge or go out and buy lots of fattening foods that you would normally avoid. You then go back to your room, or home, and eat it all, quickly, in secret. You might get through packets of biscuits, several boxes of chocolates and a number of cakes in just a couple of hours. You may even take someone else’s food, or shoplift, to satisfy the urge to binge.
Afterwards you feel stuffed and bloated – and probably guilty and depressed. You try to get rid of the food you have eaten by making yourself sick, or by purging with laxatives. It is very uncomfortable and tiring, but you find yourself trapped in a routine of binge eating, and vomiting and/or purging.
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