Anorexia nervosa

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    Anorexia Nervosa Effects

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    The Effects of Anorexia Nervosa According to the National Institute of Mental Health, Anorexia Nervosa has the highest mortality rate of any mental disorder. It’s director, Thomas Insel, estimates over 10% of those suffering will pass away from complications of the illness. This statistic can not only be attributed to its widespread effect on adolescents (especially teenage girls) but how it hurt’s the overall health of the infected. The overall health of one’s life can be measured by their control

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    Perfectionism and obsessive tendencies as the root cause of Anorexia Nervosa is a reoccurring theme in many patients’ experiences, for example in a personal narrative of an unnamed anorexic patient explains her experience with Anorexia Nervosa and how her perfectionist and obsessive character influenced her developing this eating disorder. She describes that initially her “rigid and controlling eating pattern merely seemed to fit with the perfectionism characteristic of most of my daily interactions”

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    shame. I have an eating disorder” (Morrow, 2010). For 10 million females and 1 million males in the United States alone, eating disorders, such as Anorexia Nervosa, are a daily struggle. The fifth edition of The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, also referred to as the DSM V (American Psychiatric Association, 2013), defines Anorexia Nervosa as an eating disorder in which an individual persistently restrict his or her daily caloric intake leading to significantly low body weight. An

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    thin in order to be beautiful? Background: Anorexia Nervosa is one of the most common eating disorders that are effecting the lives of women all over the world. Anorexia nervosa was first talked about in the year 1684, it wasn’t until the 19th century (1870) that it became known as an illness and medical professionals started coming up with a diagnosis. Thesis claim: There are many factors than can cause someone to develop anorexia nervosa. Three supporting details: beauty expectations

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    The trauma of anorexia Let’s start saying that in my family two of them had or still have anorexia: my cousin and my aunt. It has been a pain in the heart. For years, I was afraid of the magnitude of this mental disorder. Anyway, this disorder is something that intrigued me for a long time, so I am going to try to transmit the pain it can release this disorder to the family and mainly to the person who actually has it. The mental disorder, called: anorexia nervosa, is a disorder characterized by

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    Erin Arsenault Abnormal Psychology Anorexia Research Paper Background: Many people, mainly woman experience the feeling of being fat. This feeling is a key factor for diagnosing anorexia nervosa (AN). AN is characterized by severe and serious disorders of self-perception of their body and the determined pursuit of thinness. This disorder was first discovered by Morton in 1689. AN was believed to be a form of hysteria but then was thought to be a hereditary abnormality of the central

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    Psychology of Anorexia Nervosa Anorexia Nervosa is currently viewed by society as an extremely complicated disorder, misunderstood, over looked, and misjudged based on the stigmas of society. People who suffer from eating disorders like Anorexia do not always report the fact they are in living with the disorder because they are ashamed or scared of what might happen to them or what people will say. An individual may also feel that they do not met the exact criteria of Anorexia Nervosa in the DSM 5

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    1. The case study. Christine is a sixteen year old girl who has severely restricted her dietary intake. She is currently forty nine kilograms and height 163cm. Her mother says she was 60kgs six months ago. In form three, at age fifteen, Christine was removed from the public school she was attending and put into a private school, where she was awarded the dux prize. She did not have any friends during this year as she spent all recesses in the library, reporting that ate alone as she ‘had no friends

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    Anorexia Nervosa is characterized by a refusal to maintain a minimal normal body weight. A disturbance in perception of body shape and weight is an essential feature of anorexia nervosa. It appears to be far more present in industrialized societies, in which there is an abundance amount of food and in which being considered attractive is linked to being thin. The disorder is most common in countries like the United States, Canada, Europe, Australia and Japan. More than 95% of cases of anorexia nervosa

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    Anorexia nervosa is a serious eating disorder characterized by an abnormally low body weight and an intense fear of gaining weight. This disorder results in unhealthy, often dangerous weight loss. It can affect women and men of all ages but the ratio of adolescence women is greater than men. The affected person places a high value on controlling his weight and shape, using extreme efforts that tend to significantly interfere with his life. This disorder commonly involves mental challenges such

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