Does your child have an eating
disorder?
If you answered
NO, do you know what to look for
to be sure you're right? The websites we listed below will
give you the warning signs of eating disorders. There are
many different types of eating
disorders.
These sites should only be used as a guide to help parents
and children see the signs and symptoms of these eating
disorders. Never treat these disorders by yourself. ONLY
a professional should diagnose and treat eating disorders.
Sometimes eating disorders are a result of depression.
Sometimes depression is a result of eating disorders. ONLY
a professional will know what would be the proper treatment.
Other Areas of Interest on This Site:
Children and Depression
Children and Drugs
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Eating disorders involve serious disturbances
in eating behavior, such as extreme and unhealthy reduction of food intake or
severe overeating, as well as feelings of distress or extreme concern about body
shape or weight.
Eating disorders frequently develop during adolescence
or early adulthood, but can occur during childhood or later in adulthood.
Three psychiatric eating disorders,
anorexia nervosa,
bulimia, and
binge eating disorder are on the
increase among teenage girls and young women and often run in families.
Anorexia and bulimia affect nearly 10 million women
and 1 million men (primarily teens and young adults) in reported cases in the
U.S. and can be fatal.
Anorexia nervosa has the highest premature fatality
rate of any mental illness.
The average age of sufferers is dropping rapidly (as
young as elementary school), with peak onset among girls ages 11-13.
It's estimated that another 25 million people suffer
from binge eating disorder.
Anorexia nervosa
Anorexia nervosa is characterized by self-starvation
and excessive weight loss. The diagnosis of anorexia is made when the anorexic
either loses fifteen percent (15%) of their weight or when the growing child
fails to acquire eighty-five percent (85%) of the minimal weight for their
particular age and height.
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Symptoms of anorexia include:
-
Refusal to maintain body weight at or above
a minimally normal weight for height, body type, age, and activity level
-
Intense fear of weight gain or being “fat”
-
Feeling “fat” or overweight despite
dramatic weight loss
-
Loss of menstrual periods
-
Extreme concern with body weight and shape
-
Sore throat and painless swelling of the
cheeks from vomiting
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A teenager with anorexia nervosa is typically a
perfectionist and a high achiever in school. At the same time, she suffers from
low self-esteem, irrationally believing she is fat regardless of how thin she
becomes. Desperately needing a feeling of mastery over her life, the teenager
with anorexia nervosa experiences a sense of control only when she says "no" to
the normal food demands of her body. In a relentless pursuit to be thin, the
girl starves herself. This often reaches the point of serious damage to the
body and, in a small number of cases, may lead to death.
Bulimia nervosa
Bulimia nervosa is characterized by a secretive
cycle of binge eating followed by purging. Bulimia includes eating large
amounts of food -- more than most people would eat in one meal -- in short
periods of time, then getting rid of the food and calories through vomiting,
laxative abuse, or over-exercising.
It is difficult to detect bulimia. Many
individuals with the disorder remain at normal body weight or above because of
their frequent binges and purges, which can range from once or twice a week to
several times a day. Dieting heavily between episodes of bingeing and purging
is also common. Eventually, half of those with anorexia will develop bulimia.
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Symptoms of bulimia include:
-
Repeated episodes of bingeing on
high-caloric food
-
Feeling out of control during a binge and
eating beyond the point of comfortable fullness
-
Purging after a binge, (typically by
self-induced vomiting, abuse of laxatives, diet pills and/or diuretics,
excessive exercise, or fasting)
-
Frequent dieting, with binges alternating
with severe diets
-
Extreme concern with body weight and shape
-
Hiding the signs of throwing up by running
water while spending long periods of time in the bathroom
-
Sore throat and painless swelling of the
cheeks from vomiting
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The purging of bulimia presents a serious threat to
the patient's physical health, including dehydration, hormonal imbalance, the
depletion of important minerals, and damage to vital organs.
Binge Eating Disorder
Binge eating disorder (also known as Compulsive
Overeating) is characterized primarily by periods of uncontrolled, impulsive, or
continuous eating beyond the point of feeling comfortably full.
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Symptoms of binge eating are:
-
Eating large amounts of food when not
physically hungry
-
Rapid eating
-
Eating until uncomfortably full
-
Eating alone out of embarrassment at the
quantity of food being eaten
-
Hiding of food because the person feels
embarrassed about how much he or she is eating
-
Feelings of disgust, depression, or guilt
with overeating
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This disorder is different from bulimia because
people with binge eating disorder usually do not purge afterward by vomiting or
using laxatives.
While there is no purging, there may be sporadic
fasts or repetitive diets and often feelings of shame or self-hatred after a
binge.
People who binge disparage their bodies and feel
self-conscious about their body size and/or shape. However, not everyone who
has binge eating disorder is overweight. Although body weight may vary from
normal to mild, moderate, or severe obesity, most people with binge eating
disorder are obese (more than 20 percent above a healthy body weight).
Up to half of all people with binge eating disorder
have a history of depression.
Whether depression is a cause or effect of binge eating disorder is unclear.
Many people report that
anger, sadness, boredom,
anxiety or other negative
emotions can trigger a binge episode.
Impulsive behavior and certain other psychological
problems (such as obsessive-compulsive behavior,
substance abuse,
and personality
disorders) may be more common in people with binge eating disorder.
Unhealthy weight gain due to
poor diet, lack of
exercise, and bingeing is responsible for over 300,000 deaths each year. The
annual cost to society for obesity is estimated at nearly $100 billion.
Eating Disorders is a Serious
Mental Health Issue
Recognition of eating disorders as real and
treatable diseases is critically important. The consequences of eating
disorders can be severe. For example, one in ten cases of anorexia nervosa
leads to death from starvation, cardiac arrest, kidney failure, other medical
complications, or suicide.
Without treatment, up to twenty
percent (20%) of people with serious eating disorders die. However, early
identification and treatment leads to more favorable outcomes.
With treatment, the mortality rate falls to two to three percent (2-3%).
Getting Help
Parents who notice symptoms of an eating disorder in
their teenagers should ask their family physician or pediatrician for a referral
to a child and
adolescent mental health professional.
With comprehensive treatment, most teenagers can be
relieved of the symptoms or helped to control eating disorders. Mental health
professionals that specialize in working with children and adolescents are
trained to evaluate, diagnose, and treat these psychiatric disorders. Eating
disorders frequently co-occur with
depression,
substance abuse,
and anxiety disorders,
and it is important to recognize and get appropriate treatment for these
problems as well.
Treatment for eating disorders usually requires a
team approach; including individual therapy, family therapy, working with a
primary care physician, and working with a nutritionist.
Treatment usually begins in an outpatient setting,
but residential treatment may be necessary if symptoms are severe.
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Hospitalization may be necessary if there is:
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If the hospital is not exclusive to the treatment of
eating disorders, the individual should then be transferred to an residential
treatment center specializing in eating disorders that addresses underlying
psychological issues and provides a safe, secure, loving, and supportive
environment.
Information from the
National
Eating Disorders Association, the
American Academy of Child &
Adolescent Psychiatry, and
Anorexia Nervosa and Related Eating Disorders, Inc.
The above information was borrowed from:
http://www.focusas.com/EatingDisorders.html. Please visit their
website for additional information on a variety of topics.
Please, take your time looking through these websites; your
child's life may depend on it.
Articles about Children's nutrition topics
Library of children's nutrition articles
http://www.thedietchannel.com/nutrition/childrens
Children and Eating
Disorders
Eating disorders are common in teens. Learn to spot the
warning signs that your
child might have anorexia or bulimia and how to get help.
http://www.pediatrics.
about.com/od/eatingdisorders/
Children and
Adolescents with Mental, Emotional, and Behavioral ...
Eating Disorders. Children or adolescents who are intensely
afraid of gaining
weight and do not believe that they are underweight may
have eating disorders. ...
http://www.
mentalhealth.samhsa.gov/publications/allpubs/CA-0006/
default.asp
Eating
Disorders and Children 1
What is the best way to treat children with eating
disorders? ... Eating disorders
in children, like in adults, are generally viewed as a
multi-determined ...
http://www.vanderbilt.edu/AnS/psychology/
health_psychology/childrenandED.html
Eating Disorders in Children - Keep Kids Healthy
A discussion of eating disorders in teenagers, such as
anorexia nervosa and
bulimia nervosa, and how to recognize signs of an eating
disorder in children.
http://www.keepkidshealthy.com/adolescent/
adolescentproblems/eatingdisorders.html
When Very Young
Kids Have Eating Disorders
Anorexia and bulimia appear in children as young as four
years old. Learn how
parents can prevent eating disorders in their children.
http://www.
healthyplace.com/Communities/
Eating_Disorders/children_1.asp
Children and Eating Disorders
Children may also develop eating disorders as a way of
dealing with the many ...
Children are at a risk for developing an eating disorder
if the parents ...
http://www.mirror-mirror.org/child.htm
Your Child | Eating Disorders
Listen carefully to what your child says. Teens with
eating disorders ... How are
eating disorders treated? How can I get my child started
in treatment? ...
http://www.med.umich.edu/
1libr/yourchild/eatdis.htm
Bulimia
Nervosa - symptoms, causes, who gets it, and recovery
My book, When Your Child Has an Eating Disorder is a
reader-friendly and effective
guide for patients, parents and professionals in bringing
about healing. ...
http://www.empoweredparents.
com/1eatingdisorders/bulimia.htm
Teenagers with Eating
Disorders - AACAP Facts For Families #2
With comprehensive treatment, most teenagers can be
relieved of the symptoms or
helped to control eating disorders. The child and
adolescent psychiatrist is ...
http://www.aacap.org/
publications/factsfam/eating.htm
Articles about
Children, Food and Eating, Diets for Obese and ...
How to Help Your Children Avoiding Eating Disorders.
Child raising preventing
eating disorders and overweight · Helping the child
to recognize real hunger ...
http://www.web4health.info/en/
answers/ed-child-links.htm
Eating Disorders
The Parent's Guide to Childhood Eating Disorders ...
When Your Child Has an Eating
Disorder: A Step-by-Step Manual for Parents and Other
Caregivers ...
http://www.focusas.com/EatingDisorders.
html
Know When to Seek Help for your Child - Eating Disorders
Decision to seek professional help for a child with an
eating disorder can be
difficult and painful for a parent. Learn how to be
prepared to seek help for ...
http://www.healthyplace.com/Communities/
Eating_Disorders/children_treatment.asp
Binge Eating
Disorder
A child will be diagnosed with a binge eating disorder
only after his or her ...
As with any eating disorder, it's also important that
the child receives ...
http://www.kidshealth.org/parent/
emotions/behavior/binge_eating.html
Fighting Anorexia: No One to
Blame - Newsweek Society - MSNBC.com
one of the few facilities nationwide that specialize in
young children with eating
disorders. Emily still blames herself for not acting
sooner. ...
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/
10219756/site/newsweek/
eatingdi.html
Eating disorders in small children and anorexia among
teenagers are usually ...
With respect to American school children, eating disorders
are three times ...
http://www.cbu.dataphone.se/
EngBarnrapp/eatingdi.html
Eating disorders
(Anorexia, Bulimia, Binge Eating) and their ...
Eating disorders (Anorexia Bulimia Binge Eating) and their
effects on children
facts and strategies for parents.
http://www.notmykid.org/
parentArticles/eatingDisorders/
Children
May Learn Eating Disorders
Kids learn good or bad eating habits from their parents.
http://www.
healthatoz.com/healthatoz/
Atoz/dc/cen/ment/eatd/alert08282002.jsp
Ten Acts of Courage For Parents of
Children With Eating Disorders
How parents can help prevent eating disorders in their
children.
http://www.poppink.com/tenacts.html
Are you a teen and need another teen
to listen to you? Do you, as a teen, need answers from
another teen to your questions about anything?
Go to the following website:
OnYourMind.net: Peer support, chat, information and help
...
So, what's on your mind? We're a non-profit web-based
organization from teens,
for teens that can provide support and referrals through
an online chat, ...
http://www.onyourmind.net/
Books on
children and eating disorders!
Search the box below for more information
on children and eating disorders or any other subject.
Follow this link, Children and Eating Disorders
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for information on this subject.