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EATING
DISORDERS
Eating
disorders are extreme disturbances in an individual’s behavior and
feelings related to food, weight, and body image. They are most likely
to develop in young women, during adolescence and young adulthood. But
children, preteens, adult women, and men also may develop these
problems. They are serious problems with life-threatening consequences.
Anorexia Nervosa
is characterized by excessive weight loss through self-starvation and
sometimes through purging. Purging includes vomiting, using laxatives,
and exercising excessively. Symptoms include:
-
Refusal
to maintain a normal weight
-
Intense
fear of weight gain
-
Obsessive
preoccupation with weight and shape
-
Loss
of menstrual periods
-
Distorted
body image
Bulimia Nervosa
is characterized by cycles of binge eating followed by purging, usually
done in secret. The individual’s weight may range from below to above
average, so it may be harder to detect. Symptoms include:
-
Repetitive
cycles of bingeing and purging
-
Feeling
out of control of food intake
-
Purging
after bingeing via self-induced vomiting, laxatives, diet pills,
diuretics, excessive exercise, or starvation
-
Obsessive
preoccupation with weight and shape
In
addition, some people may have a mixture of anorexia and bulimic
symptoms without qualifying for either diagnosis. They may engage in
compulsive overeating or bingeing without purging. Preoccupied and
significantly distressed about their eating habits, they may gradually
gain weight to the point of obesity. Many people have both symptoms of
anorexia and bulimia. Men are most likely to lose weight or to purge by
excessively exercising.
Eating
Disorders "Eat Up
" Relationships
Eating
disorders are consuming. They consume the individual in obsessive,
negative thinking and behaviors, and they consume the individual’s
relationships with family members, loved ones, and life. This is
partially due to the effects of starvation. When people are not
adequately nourished, they think about food constantly, sometimes even
dreaming about it. They also become depressed, isolated, and tired. They
avoid relationships because they often feel others pressure them to eat.
They are physically depleted, and feel compelled to engage in eating
disordered behaviors.
Loved
ones find eating disorders extremely difficult to understand and accept.
Seeing someone you love starve or damage her or his body is stressful.
Often, parents, spouses, and others begin to become intrusive in their
efforts to get the person to eat or to stop purging. Soon, the
individual may see these loved ones as enemies trying to control her or
him rather than help.
Eating
disorders may develop if a person has no other way to speak or represent
feelings. Frequently family dynamics, problematic communication
patterns, losses, or stresses like abuse have contributed to negative
feelings the person could not deal with directly. It is never a simple
matter that can be solved by just telling the person to eat. The
symptoms have become the individual’s way to avoid facing problems
more directly or are an attempt to feel in control when the rest of life
feels out of control.
Feed
Your Relationship by Getting Help
Although
eating disorders vary in severity from mild to life-threatening, they
usually don’t go away by themselves. People with eating disorders
often fear getting help because it could be seen as a sign of weakness.
Loved ones can help break through that by being open to getting help
themselves and by examining how they or other family relationships or
issues may have contributed. In a family, both fathers and mothers need
to be involved in treatment. This challenge needs to be shared.
Serious
Distress Signals
When
someone:
-
Fasts
or severely restricts food intake
-
Hides
or sneaks food
-
Spends
excessive time in the bathroom after meals
-
Vomits,
takes laxatives, diet pills or other medications to lose weight
-
Has
lost a significant amount of weight
-
Is
tired and depressed
-
Can’t
concentrate
-
Has
irregular periods, swollen glands or joints, broken blood vessels or
bloodshot eyes
-
Wears
layers of clothes even in warm weather
-
Faints
or passes out
-
When
these or other signs are present, professional help is urgently
needed. Make an appointment with a physician and with an expert in
eating disorders to find out how serious this is and to design a
treatment plan that w
ill help you cope.
What
Helps?
Usually
people with eating disorders need an interdisciplinary approach,
including individual and family or couples therapy, nutritional
counseling, medical monitoring, and sometimes medications or group
therapy. Depending on the severity, inpatient, day hospital, residential
treatment, or even tube-feeding or intravenous fluids may be necessary.
The
sooner someone gets treatment, the more likely it is that person will
recover. Get help soon. Treatment is effective. As many as 75 percent of
those afflicted by anorexia or bulimia will recover. The remaining 25
percent will be chronically ill and some will die. Family or marital
therapy significantly improves the possibility of recovery. Family
members and loved ones need to understand that the problem is not a
simple one. Advice to "just eat" won’t help. The eating and
body image issues cover up much more complicated feelings. The eating
disorder is an illogical system of thoughts and behaviors, and is an
attempt to solve deep self-esteem and identity problems and gain a sense
of control over one’s life. But, remember that there is hope and
effective treatment for eating disorders.
Books
Your
Dieting Daughter: Is She Dying For Attention? By Carolyn Costin.
Brunner/Mazel (1997). A great resource for parents to help them
understand the psychological factors prompting a girl to diet, and to
distinguish between diets and eating disorders. It includes sound
nutritional advice, distinctions between "fit or fanatic"
exercise, and a discussion of family issues.
When
Girls Feel Fat: Helping Girls Through Adolescence. By Sandra Friedman.
Harper Collins Canada (1998). Beautifully explains how girls translate
their feelings and disappointments into self-degradation and "the
language of fat." A resource for parents, educators, and others
guiding girls. Full of practical advice and theory.
Eating
Disorders: A Reference Sourcebook. By Raymond Lemberg (Editor). Oryx
Press (1999). Short articles by leading experts include discussions of
symptoms and causes, physiological and medical issues, sociocultural
contributions and risk factors, dieting and obesity, and treatment
strategies. It includes a directory of treatment facilities and an
extensive resource list, including books, videos, internet sites, and
organizations.
Father
Hunger: Fathers, Daughters, and Food. By Margo Maine. Gürze Books
(1991). The only book to explore how fathers contribute to their
daughter’s body image, weight preoccupation, self-esteem, and eating
disorders. Includes practical solutions for fathers, mothers, and
daughters on how to improve family relationships and reconnect.
Surviving
an Eating Disorder: New Perspectives and Strategies for Family and
Friends. By Michele Siegel, Judith Brisman, and Margot Weinshel.
HarperPerennial (1997). Practical help for families trying to understand
and live with an eating disorder. Gives both a dynamic understanding of
the family context and advice regarding day-to-day issues such as anger,
denial, secrets, and meals.
Eating
Disorders Awareness and Prevention, Inc.
603 Stewart Street, Suite 803
Seattle, WA 98101
A
nonprofit organization dedicated to increasing the awareness and
prevention of eating disorders through education and community activism.
Call (800) 931-2237 or (206) 382-3587 for information.
©2006 by the AAMFT
written by Margo Maine, Ph.D.
Item
#1051

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