Thursday, January 27, 2011

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Eating disorders are so common in America that 2 out of every 100 students will struggle with one.

Eating disorders are more than just going on a diet to lose weight or trying to make sure you exercise every day. They're extremes in eating behavior — the diet that never ends and gradually gets more restrictive.


The most common types of eating disorder are anorexia nervosa and bulimia nervosa (usually called simply "anorexia" and "bulimia"). But other food-related disorders, like binge eating disorders, body image disorders, and food phobias, are showing up more frequently than they used to.

Anorexia
People with anorexia have an extreme fear of weight gain and a distorted view of their body size and shape. As a result, they can't maintain a normal body weight. Some people with anorexia restrict their food intake by dieting, fasting, or excessive exercise. They hardly eat at all — and the small amount of food they do eat becomes an obsession.

Other people with anorexia do something called binge eating and purging, where they eat a lot of food and then try to get rid of the calories by forcing themselves to vomit, using laxatives, or exercising excessively.

Bulimia
Bulimia is similar to anorexia. With bulimia, a person binge eats (eats a lot of food) and then tries to compensate in extreme ways, such as forced vomiting or excessive exercise, to prevent weight gain. Over time, these steps can be dangerous.

To be diagnosed with bulimia, a person must be binging and purging regularly, at least twice a week for a couple of months. Binge eating is different from going to a party and "pigging out" on pizza, then deciding to go to the gym the next day and eat more healthfully. People with bulimia eat a large amount of food (often junk food) at once, usually in secret. The person typically feels powerless to stop the eating and can only stop once he or she is too full to eat any more. Most people with bulimia then purge by vomiting, but may also use laxatives or excessive exercise.

Although anorexia and bulimia are very similar, people with anorexia are usually very thin and underweight but those with bulimia may be a normal weight or even overweight.

Binge Eating Disorder
This eating disorder is similar to anorexia and bulimia because a person binges regularly on food (more than three times a week). But, unlike the other eating disorders, a person with binge eating disorder does not try to "compensate" by purging the food.

Anorexia, bulimia, and binge eating disorder all involve unhealthy eating patterns that begin gradually and build to the point where a person feels unable to control them.


If you or your friend is struggling with one of these disorders... it is so important for you to tell someone who can help. We can't always control the world around us but we can control the choices we make.

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

Ethan House period 2
Something I want to improve on in the fitness gram is the curl ups. I want to improve by at least 15. One way I can improve at this is doing sit-ups every day. Another thing I want to improve on is the push ups. I want to increase my score by at least 5. A way I can do this is by doing pushups more often.

Anonymous said...

Ashlie lohr5
I want to improve my pacer by 14. im going to run everyday for 15 minutes. I want to improve my pushup test by 10. ill do 25 pushups every day.

Anonymous said...

Keaton Beyer pd. 1
Something i want to improve on is trunk lift. I will improve on trunk lift by increasing by 3 inches by doing 5 trunk lifts everyday. Another thing i want to improve on is push ups. I will increase my push up score by 6 and i will increase it by doing 8 a night then increase every night by one.

Anonymous said...

Tara Pieschke Period 6 (1)My goal is to do 10 push-up each day (2) My goal is to do 10 more Truck-Lifts