Eating disorders can very well change a person's life and affect the people around them. People involved in these eating disorders are mostly referred to as victims, due to the horrific and dangerous effects of these diseases. Eating disorders are very serious; sometimes life-threatening illnesses can occur. There are three different common eating disorders: bulimia, anorexia nervosa, and binge eating. There are also two that are not that common disorders recognized by most people today; they are anorexia, pica and bulimia in combination. You must first know how to recognize disorders to help yourself or others fight. Eating disorders are very common and people should know what they are, what causes them, how to detect them and, most importantly, how to prevent or stop them. Anorexia nervosa is one of the types of eating disorders in which a person starves themselves to achieve and maintain their idea of “perfection.” This condition occurs when a person constantly follows an extreme diet due to a mental image they have of their body that is incorrect. It usually affects women around the time they begin to go through puberty and has also been known to occur in their late teens and early twenties. This state of starvation leads to a loss of 150 kg below normal body weight. Of the 7 million women between the ages of 15 and 35 who suffer from anorexia, 65% will definitely die from complications of this disorder (Wellness Web 2). Anorexia is often the result of an emotional problem. Control over eating may be the only area they feel they have control over. Part of recovery often involves helping the anorexic gain some independence (Greenberg 114). ... half of the document ... you need to have it, and experts estimate that the disorder affects as many as 4% of college-aged women. Compulsive eaters consume food to comfort and soothe hurt feelings they are dealing with. Many magazine models influence a woman's mind into believing that she needs to look a certain way. The exact definition is an irresistible impulse to act, regardless of the rationality of the motivation. Over the years, the category has adopted a new name: binge eating. The victim tends to eat even when he is not hungry at all. The person may eat impulsively or perhaps even continuously. Although the compulsive eater realizes that his behavior is abnormal, he seems powerless to stop it. The compulsive eater is different from the bulimic, because he does not try to purge himself by vomiting or using laxatives (Moe 14).
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