Senin, 27 Agustus 2012

The Real Statistics About Eating Disorders

by muhreese The statistics about eating disorders and who suffers from eating disorders might surprise or shock you. Eating/food disorders, includin

Tips Help a Friend With An Eating Disorder  Disorder
Tips Help a Friend With An Eating Disorder Disorder

by muhreese

The statistics about eating disorders and who suffers from eating disorders might surprise or shock you. Eating/food disorders, including anorexia and bulimia, are more prevalent than you might imagine, and are also more serious than many people realize.

Here are some statistics about eating disorders to consider:

About two percent of all female adolescents and young women have either anorexia or bulimia.
About 90% of people with eating disorders are female.
The average age when a person develops anorexia or bulimia is 17. But the condition has been diagnosed in children under the age of ten. It is rare to diagnose an eating disorder for the first time in someone over the age of 40.
Without treatment, 20% of people with anorexia will die from the condition.
With treatment, 2 - 3% of people with anorexia will die from the condition.
Anorexia has the highest mortality rate of any psychological disorder.
Half of all anorexics also show symptoms of bulimia.

Who suffers from an eating/food disorder?

We know from the statistics about eating disorders that women are much more likely to suffer from eating disorders than men. However, men do get eating/food disorders. Research indicates that homosexual males are more likely to have eating/food disorders than heterosexual males, although experts do not know just why that is. Interestingly enough, research tells us that males on a wrestling team are seven to ten times more likely to develop eating/food disorders than other males.

Eating/food disorders can affect people of all levels of education, but research tells us that about 84% of all people with bulimia have a college education. Statistics about eating disorders tell us that these conditions can affect people of all economic levels. They affect people of all religions. Since eating/food disorders are more likely to be diagnosed in teens and young adults, sufferers are more likely to be single than married and are less likely to have children of their own, although some are married and some do have children.

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Commonly question about The Real Statistics About Eating Disorders

Question :

I need to talk to people who suffer from eating disorders. why?

dont take this seriously, its just for an english project. i just need to talk to people who suffer from eating disorders. could you please tell me how old you are, when you started having problems about your body image, and why you think you need to be skinny? what do you think is so good about the ideal image the media portrays? who is your role model?
since i was doing this project.. i thought i should actually talk to REAL people who suffer through these problems and hear REAL facts other than facts from authors who just have statistics.

please help me!
i will respect your privacy and not ask you other
questions other than explaining in a little more
detail what youre talking about..

thank you everybody.
Answer :
I did have issues with body image and eating disorders. I grew up very skinny as a child; all my friends were chubby...around puberty i gained lots of weight and my friends became pretty. I had problems. What started as a low carb diet turned into no carbs..3 hrs a night of exercise..and eventually no food at all. I continously starved myself unless i felt weak i would eat some crackers, cheese, or drink water. I became obsessed..i lost alot of weight and looked skinny. I was still curvy not terrifying skinny, but i was getting boney. Anyway..im older now 21 and i still have issues with body image..i think once a girl or guy has an issue, it never leaves them unless they find a way to love themself. I am heavier now then i was at the time of my eating disorder..i still have issues with trying to lose weight..im working on loving myself. But i think our society makes it hard for young girls to love what god gave them and who they are.
Question :

Would you be so kind to correct my englisch homework? it s an essay about beauty!?

Beauty is very important for many people, especially in our modern society. Your look has a big impact on what people think about you as the first impression forms the view on you. Although most people say that inner values are more important than the outside appearance, it is proofed that attractive people are given preference in many fields of public life. Beautiful people often get better jobs and students get better grades if they look good. Physical attractive people are considered to be more qualified and more intelligent than others.
Nobody s perfect and many people these days are not happy with their body. It could be a blemish people are born with or a problem that comes with age that makes people feel self- conscious and unhappy.
Today we can come real close to achieving physical beauty. Cosmetic surgery is an emerging issue in today s modern society s quest for perfection. In the 1980s, plastic surgery was only for millionaires and movie-stars, but today a lot of ordinary people are having operations to look like they want to. Additionally, the ages are dropping too. Statistics show, that about 24.000 teenagers are having a plastic surgery every year! At that age, the body is still growing and cosmetic surgery is a very risky business. On the one hand, I think that cosmetic surgery is okay in order to increase your self-confidence and feel more comfortable. It can really help if someone is very discontent with a part of his or her body and therefore is very depressed and has no self esteem. But on the other hand many people carry beauty to excess and would do everything just to look perfect.
Cosmetic surgery can help people to solve problems that make them unhappy and not only to look better but feel better as well.
But there is always a certain risk factor people should mark when they want to go under the knife. As cosmetic surgery is usually done under anaesthetic, it is not exactly without danger. In some cases, the results may be bad.
As I already mentioned, I think that it is okay to correct a blemish if you do it for the right reason. You should do it for yourself, to be happier and to be content with yourself but not for other people. In my opinion it is important that people remember that a change in their look can help them to feel better, but won t turn an unhappy life into a happy one.

Nowadays, everyone wants to be slim and look young. The media has a big impact on society. Skinny models with tiny noses and slender hips are considered as the perfect female examples and many people, especially young girls, want to look like them. They want to be thin and pretty like the models they see on television and in magazines. Models, actors and nearly all successful people are slim and pretty and our society tries to imitate these famous people. Often the desire becomes an obsession and young girls see thinness as being a needed characteristic. For many girls, the teenage years are spent trying to acquire this look. But this can be very risky. Especially young girls are very prone to get into a vicious cycle of counting calories and diets. This may lead to very critical conditions and sometimes it even causes death. But not only the desire for a perfect body leads to these so called eating disorders, there are also lots of other reasons for it. Many factors are considered when making a diagnosis for a person with this Problem. They often start as a response to other problems such as problems in the family or conflicts with friends, school pressure, abuse or other tragedies.
Maybe parents put too much pressure on their child and it has the feeling it cannot fulfill the parent s high expectations. Others think that moving into adulthood is too distressing. Many girls don t like it that their body changes into a body of a woman and so they try to hold the maturing process by refusing to eat.
There are different forms of eating disorders.
People who suffer from anorexia nervosa just eat very little and sometimes even nothing. They starve themselves in order to be thin, although they are already underweighted. Anorexia bulimia is another form of eating disorder. People concerned devour masses of food and make themselves vomit afterwards, because they want to stay slim. Sometimes they also take laxatives because they fear to put on weight. Eating disorders have a very bad effect on health and the body. People who suffer from Anorexia are often undernourished, feel weak and tired. Dehydration, osteoporosis, kidney stones and kidney failure are not uncommon among anorexics. An irregular heartbeat develops because of a change in heart muscle, which can lead to heart failure and even death. The blood circulation slows down and the body loses heat, that s why many people who suffer from anorexia are often freezing. A lot of girls find their menstrual circle is disrupted. Some anorexics even lose their hair and many bulimics have damaged teeth. A long term effect is o
Answer :
ANSWER: (rewritten for grammar and style)
Beauty is important for many people and especially so in our modern society. Beauty creates a first impression and even influences how other people perceive personality characteristics. Although values are more important than appearance, attractive people are always given preferential treatment. Beautiful people get better jobs and theres a belief too that students get better grades if they look good. Its too often common that attractive people are considered more qualified and more intelligent than others.

Quite frequently, teens arent happy with their appearance so that perhaps a blemish from childhood or even an item of clothing makes teens feel self-conscious and unhappy.

Nowadays, everyone wants to be slim and look young and in no small way, the media helps promote this ideal. Skinny youthful models with tiny noses and slender hips are considered the perfect female images so that young girls aspire to look like them. Young girls want to be thin and pretty like models seen on television and in magazines. Models, actors, celebrities and successful people all seem to be slim and pretty.

All too often the pursuit of beauty becomes an obsession and young girls see thinness as being a needed characteristic. For many girls, the teenage years are spent trying to acquire this look. But this can be very risky. Especially young girls are very prone to get into a vicious cycle of counting calories and diets. This may lead to very critical conditions and sometimes it even causes death. But not only the desire for a perfect body leads to these so called eating disorders, there are also lots of other reasons for it. Many factors are considered when making a diagnosis for a person with this Problem. They often start as a response to other problems such as problems in the family or conflicts with friends, school pressure, abuse or other tragedies

Maybe parents put too much pressure on their child causing feelings of despair trying to fulfill the parent s high expectations. And the pressure of moving into adulthood is too distressing. Many girls don t like the secondary sex characteristics morphing their body from a girl to woman to hold-off the maturing process by refusing to eat.


There are different forms of eating disorders including anorexia nervosa which is eating very little and sometimes even nothing. This disorder is associated with starvation in order to be thin. Another eating disorder is anorexia bulimia which is associated with consumption of masses of food and then the subsequent purging. This disorder also involves laxatives to quickly excrete the food. Eating disorders have a very bad effect on health and the body. People who suffer from Anorexia are often undernourished, feel weak and tired. Dehydration, osteoporosis, kidney stones and kidney failure are not uncommon among anorexics. An irregular heartbeat develops because of a change in heart muscle, which can lead to heart failure and even death. The blood circulation slows down and the body loses heat, that s why many people who suffer from anorexia are often freezing. A lot of girls find their menstrual circle is disrupted. Some anorexics even lose their hair and many bulimics have damaged teeth.

I see there is an escalating competition to make people perfect. Cosmetic surgery can help people solve problems, look better and feel better but the escalation carries risk factors associated with surgery. As cosmetic surgery is most commonly performed under general anesthesia there is always a risk of mortality. Some procedures result in disfigurement but infrequently patients die from not waking up after the general anesthesia.

Its ironic too that modern societys availability of good nutrition, sanitation, medicinal technology and inexpensive fashions gives teens the greatest opportunity to be beautiful. Cosmetic surgery which is readily available is continually dropping pricing so perfection can be achieved by ever more people. In the 1980s, plastic surgery was only for millionaires and celebrities, but today many more less privileged people have procedures to look like they want to. And ages are dropping too. Statistics show about 24,000 teenagers recently had plastic surgery! At that age, the body is still growing and cosmetic surgery is a very risky business.

I believe there is a benefit to have cosmetic surgery to increase self-confidence and feel more comfortable. I can see it from a teen point of view how surgery can relieve discontentment, depression and improve self esteem.
Question :

I feel like I have split personalities?

I really feel like sometimes I m a different person - like instead of having a stable, reliable personality. I have multiples (not like dissociative identity disorder though).

For example, I have one personality that it very closely modelled off my university statistics tutor. I behave a lot like she does in class, have a "can do" attitude and become very friendly, caring, supportive as well as exceedingly enthusiastic. When I am like this, there is practically nothing that can stop me.

The next one is a real mean lady. I become very uptight and rely a lot upon tradition and rules to get through my days - everything must be done in a high class manner. For example when I am eating, I use my cutlery perfectly. I speak in a very dignified manner and conduct myself in a "posh" way.


The third state that I have noticed is really bad. I swear a lot, speed whilst driving, listen to different styles of music, am prone to being promiscuously dressed (which is abnormal) and tend to drink a heavy amount of alcohol (1/2 bottle of vodka per night, if not more). I ve even ended up in hospital from drinking so much.

The rest of the time (probably like now), I am average. But I can slip into one of these states in a flash and then be out of it a minute later. I feel like situations in my family trigger the start of the states (like if someone gets bad news, I become state one because they need me to be compassionate and I can be when I am her).

Is this normal for people? I am getting tired of not knowing who I really am - and even though I don t think I have a disorder, how do I stop acting like this? How can I just be me? It s causing troubles in my life because when I am state 3, I will go to my uni classes and act really differently in front of my classmates - now I won t go to class at all because I am so embarrassed about it.

I haven t told my therapist about it either, it just feels really stupid and I don t think I could get him to understand what s going on. But I think I might need help?
Answer :
You do not have DID , dissasociative personality disorder. It is a rare disorder, and what you describe is a feeling of being fragmented. People have different sides to their personalities, and if you were a psych student you would not have said some of the things you said.
If you need a bunch of attention, and love, then you must realize that isn t what therapy will do for you.
You should definitely talk to your therapist about all this anyway.

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