Eating Disorder Awareness Week
11th - 17th February 2013
An eating disorder is an abnormal attitude
towards food that causes someone to change his or her eating habits and
behaviour. Between the 11th
and 17th of February focus will be on eating disorders - that
can destroy lives.
It can start at any time, although it is commonest in younger
people. More recently though it has been
starting to affect more people in the older age groups than has traditionally
been seen. It is characterised by a
person focusing excessively on their weight and shape, leading them to make
unhealthy choices about food with an often-catastrophic effect on their health
and on those around them.
Eating disorders include
a range of conditions that can affect someone physically, psychologically and
socially. The most common eating disorders are:
·
Anorexia Nervosa - when someone
tries to keep their weight as low as they can, starving himself or herself or
exercising excessively to achieve this.
·
Bulimia - this is when someone
tries to control their weight by binge eating and then deliberately making
themselves sick or using laxative medication to help empty their bowels before
the food has been absorbed.
·
Binge eating - this is when
someone feels compelled to continually overeat.
Although Eating disorders are often blamed on social pressure to be
thin, with young people bombarded my images in the media that make them feel
that they need to look a certain way, the causes are often a lot more complex. There can be some biological influencing
factors, combined with an experience that may ‘set off’ the disorder, while
other factors may encourage the condition to continue.
Some risk factors can
make someone more likely to have an eating disorder. They include:
·
Having a family member who has
had an eating disorder, depression or substance abuse.
·
Being criticised for eating
habits, body shape or weight can be a strong trigger, especially in young
people.
·
Being overly concerned with being
slim, particularly if combined with pressure to be slim either from society or
for a job - for example models, athletes and ballet dancers.
·
Certain characteristics, like having
an obsessive personality or an anxiety disorder, low self-esteem or being a
perfectionist.
·
Particular experiences, such as
sexual or emotional abuse or the death of someone special can trigger one of
these conditions.
·
Difficult relationships either with
family members, peers or friends
·
Stressful situations, for example
when problems are encountered at work, school or university or at home.
It is often difficult to
recognise that a loved one or friend has developed an eating disorder but some
of the warning signs might be:
·
Someone missing meals
·
Complaining of being fat, even when
they are normal weight or are even underweight.
·
If someone is weighing themselves
and looking at themselves in the mirror all the time.
·
If when you offer a meal they always
say that they have already eaten, or they will shortly be going out to eat
somewhere else to avoid eating with you.
·
Cooking big or complicated meals
for other people, while eating very little or none of the food themselves.
·
Only eating low-calorie foods
such as lettuce or celery.
·
Feeling uncomfortable eating out
or refusing to eat in public places, such as a restaurant.
·
The use of 'pro-anorexia'
websites.
The NHS website has very useful
information like this and much more on its site. If someone in your family develops an eating
disorder then it is likely that you will be in for a long and bumpy ride. The sufferers become very clever in covering
their tracks and in choosing loose clothing that will disguise the weight they
have lost, in the case of anorexia or bulimia or even gained if they are a
binge eater. This is something that can
rarely be tackled without outside help. Look on the NHS website for help and guidance
if you think someone you know might be affected by and eating disorder.
Please
note that all information and content on UK Health Radio and this blog are
provided by the authors, producers and companies themselves and is only
intended as additional information to your general knowledge. It is not intended as a substitute for
professional medical advice or treatment. Please do not delay or disregard any
medical advice received due to information gathered on UK Health Radio.
UK
Health Radio – the health radio station for the United Kingdom, Europe and
beyond at www.ukhealthradio.com –
is kindly sponsored by www.1-stop-health-shop.com
Amanda Thomas
UK Health Radio
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