I thought the eating disorders, such as “extreme reduction of food intake or extreme overeating” are interesting because it means we have a lot of food nowadays. If the person become Bulimia Nervosa, he can eat too much food because there are more than enough food recent years, on the other hand, if the person become Anorexia Nervosa, he rejects to eat even there are lots of food. In my opinion, it is very fortunate environment to live. There are still some people who cannot eat properly in some developing countries. Moreover, about one hundred years ago, even people in developed countries could not eat too much because of world war.
Eating for getting nutrition is very basic thing to do for humans, for any animals. If I had a trouble with
The study conducted had a sample size of 90 Polish women with AN and the control group was 120 females without any signs of an eating disorder. These females were studied to identify any substantial differences in behavior. The result of the study was that females with AN exhibited less control over cognitive function and emotional behavior. The conclusion reached was that being able to identify the symptoms typical of an eating disorder in females could help in improving treatments and could also prevent any dangerous habits developed by those with
Racist Speech: is a speech where one discriminates, threatens, or even underestimates another person based on their race, religion, nationality, beliefs and even their disability. I’ve experienced so many racist remarks, speech and attitudes during my lifetime. As a matter of fact, I did experience discrimination and hate growing up all my life on the Navajo reservation. However, I did move to the city to further my education at Mesa Community College when I graduated high school. My first day of orientation was a terrible experience with a couple students. I was patiently waiting seated at a round table with a few students. Before the orientation started, I slipped into the back to use the ladies room since I knew it was going to take a couple
Barbarich-Marsteller, N. C. (2012). Anorexia Nervosa: Symptoms, Treatment, and Neurobiology. New York: Nova Science Publishers, Inc. This is an article that focused on the different therapies and interventions that could be used and conducted to help a patient with anorexia nervosa such as Individual Supportive Psychotherapy (ISP) is not a formal psychoanalytic treatment.
Psychological illnesses in which a person has abnormal eating habits such as eating too much or eating too little are called eating disorders. There are three main types of eating disorders. The types or eating disorders are bulimia nervosa, anorexia nervosa and binge eating disorder. There are many causes of eating disorders. Eating disorders are most commonly caused by the way genetic vulnerability, psychological factors, and socio-cultural influences (Eating Disorders Risk Factors). Eating disorders can be very harmful or even deadly.
Social media has caused for an increase the in the amount of eating disorders in the world. Anorexia Nervosa began as Anorexia Mirabilis or the miraculous gift of starvation sent from God. Women and girls would starve herself to show that they were saintlike. Sometimes they would even reach sainthood, just St. Catherine. After many girls died from foolishly trying to achieve sainthood, Anorexia Mirabilis was frowned upon and died down until the 1800s.
Thousands of people in this world struggle with eating disorders. “Gina battled bulimia for seven years—struggling on her own in secret—before she finally opened up to her mother. Gina wrote her a long letter explaining her shame and embarrassment, and gave her mother a book about how to deal with someone with an eating disorder,” (“Eating Disorder Treatment and Recovery”). This is a big problem all around the world, but it can be solved. To help people with eating disorders around the world people need to work together to educate people, motivate them to change, and to create a healthy body image.
AN (Anorexia Nervosa) is the most visible eating disorder, is a serious psychiatric illness characterized by an inability to maintain a normal healthy body weight or, in individuals who are still growing, despite increasing weight loss and frank emancipation, individuals with AN strive for additional weight loss, see themselves as fat even when they are severely underweight, and often engaged in unhealthy weight loss behaviors (e.g. purging, dieting, excessive exercise, and fasting). (Bulk, Trace, Kleiman and Mazzeo, 2014). AN not only has harmful physical side effects but has psychological impacts as well. According to Serpell, Treasure, Teasdale and Sullivan (1998), one of the most interesting features of anorexia nervosa which sets it apart from many other conditions is highly valued in nature of anorexic symptoms.
Eating disorders are serious disorders that can be life damaging. Eating disorders affect five percent of women and one percent of men in the United States. Reports show that five to ten percent of women who have an eating disorder will die within ten years of having the disease. People need to be taught to be more aware of the dangerous effects of eating disorders.
A major devastating weight related disorder is anorexia nervosa which literally means “lack of appetite induced by nervousness” (Hooley, p.304). This is something of a misnomer as the heart of this disorder is a pursuit of thinness and involves destructive behaviors that result in major dieting. It is a severe eating disorder in which people may refuse to eat while denying that their behavior and appearance- which can be come skeleton like- are unusual. There are two types of anorexia nervosa: the restricting type which afflicts individuals from ages 16 to 20, in both men and women though it can develop from an age as young as 7 (Hooley, p.310) and the binge eating/purging type. The major difference between these two sub-types is the way patients
Community today is based on the idea of portraying the perfect image. This lowers self-esteem making the person perceive that they are unacceptable to the public. Which causes Subconscious thoughts to occur, in regards to the nature throughout them.
Anorexia Nervosa is a disorder which consumes the life of individuals who are diagnosed with it. Constantly being paranoid and watchful of food intake leads these people down a path which is hard to deviate from. In order to help patients who are diagnosed with this disorder, clinicians use various methods to try and create lasting positive effects. This paper will discuss these forms of treatment, analyzing what they are and their goals, while in a second part reflecting on myself and treatment in relation to my connection with the disorder. The goal of this paper is to give a detailed account of intervention, while using a humanistic perspective to understand the disorder at a clinical level. Both of these parts combine into an extensive look at anorexia nervosa’s effect on the individual level and how this disorder is effectively treated.
“Eating disorders have the highest mortality rate of any psychiatric disorder,” according to the National Institute of Mental Health, “… anorexia nervosa has a higher mortality rate than any other cause of death among females between ages 15 and 24” (Zhao, Encinosa 1). An eating disorder is a psychological illness distinguished by a disturbance in eating habits. Along with having a physical and mental effect on an individual, some cases of eating disorders end fatally. The well-known eating disorders include anorexia nervosa- self-starvation to achieve thinness; bulimia nervosa- vomiting to prevent weight gain; and binge eating disorder- uncontrollable eating habits leading to weight gain. According to the National Institute of Mental Health,
Today in the world we define beauty as a woman who has a thin waist, beautiful face, large bust, and is what you would call “skinny.” Does that really show you the true beauty of the person themselves? Lately, society has been telling women they are not beautiful unless they are a size zero, and are considered ugly if they do not fit the standards our world has created. Thus this tends to influence women of all ages to force themselves into becoming so thin, so they do not eat for days, or weeks at a time. This is a disease called anorexia nervosa.
The Diagnostic and Statistical Manuel of Mental Disorders 5th edition defines anorexia nervosa as an eating disorder characterized by self-starvation and excessive weight loss; it is a serious and potentially life-threatening disorder. According to the DSM 5, the typical diagnostic symptoms of anorexia nervosa are: dramatic weight loss leading to significant low body weight for the individuals age, sex, and health; preoccupation with weight; restriction of food, calories and fat; constant dieting; feeling “fat” or overweight despite weight loss and fear about gaining weight or being “fat.” Many individuals with anorexia nervosa deny feeling hungry and often avoid eating meals with others, resulting in withdrawal from usual friends and activities
“They taught me not to harm myself by taking away anything that could be used to cause harm, by analysing my every move and studying every centimetre of my naked body on Thursday afternoons. They taught me to eat and love myself by imposing fear of consequence. When the fear vanished, I knew I would forget. They taught me nothing.” (Sophie Glynn, www.goodreads.com)