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Disorders Eating Disorders What are the Eating Disorders
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What are the Eating Disorders
What are the symptoms of bulimia?
What are the effects of anorexia and bulimia?
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What are eating disorders?

Anorexia and bulimia are the two most serious eating disorders.

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Each illness involves a preoccupation with control over body weight, eating and food.

People with anorexia are determined to control the amounts of food they eat.

People with bulimia tend to feel out of control where food is concerned.

Anorexia affects two out of every 100 teenage girls, although the illness can be experienced earlier and later in life. Most anorexia sufferers are female, but males also suffer from the disorder.

Bulimia affects one in six females from the late teens. More females than males suffer from bulimia.

Both illnesses can be overcome and it is important for the person to seek advice about either condition as early as possible.

What are the symptoms of anorexia?

Anorexia is characterised by:

  • a loss of at least 15 per cent of body weight resulting from refusal to eat enough food, despite extreme hunger;
  • a disturbance of perceptions of body image in that the person may regard themselves as fat, overestimating body size the thinner they become;
  • an intense fear of becoming 'fat' and of losing control;
  • a tendency to exercise obsessively;
  • a preoccupation with the preparation of food;
  • making lists of 'good' and 'bad' food.
  • Usually, anorexia begins with a weight loss, either resulting from a physical illness or from dieting.

Favourable comments cause the person to believe that if thin is good, thinner is better.

The body does not react well to starvation, and erratic eating behaviour begins to dominate the person's life.

About 40 per cent of people with anorexia will later develop bulimia.



Disorders - Eating Disorders

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