Eating Disorders: Types, Symptoms and Treatment
Eating disorders are serious mental health conditions that deeply affect eating habits and body image. They can involve restrictive eating, binging, or purging, and often have severe physical, emotional, and social consequences.
Eating disorders are serious mental health conditions that deeply affect eating habits and body image. They can involve restrictive eating, binging, or purging, and often have severe physical, emotional, and social consequences.
Type of Eating Disorders
Eating Disorder
Anorexia nervosa
Anorexia nervosa (often shortened to just "anorexia") has the highest fatality rate of all mental health disorders. People with anorexia have a distorted body image that causes them to perceive themselves as fat, even if they are dangerously underweight. They are fixated on weight loss and/or maintaining a very low body weight, which drives them to engage in severe caloric restriction and excessive exercise. Those affected by anorexia are usually teenage girls and young women.
As with Anorexia nervosa , those with Bulimia nervosa (or just "bulimia") are usually teenage girls and young women who have developed an intense fear of gaining weight. However, unlike with anorexia, people with bulimia do not typically severely restrict their food intake. Instead, someone with bulimia experiences episodes of binge-eating and purging. A purging episode can consist of induced vomiting, extreme exercise, taking laxatives, or other unhealthy behaviours.
Bulimia nervosa
Binge Eating Disorder (BED) is characterised by recurring episodes of binge eating/bingeing, and feeling unable to stop or out of control when it comes to their eating behaviours. While people with Bulimia nervosa and Binge Eating Disorder both engage in binge eating behaviours, those with bulimia follow bingeing episodes with purging episodes, such as vomiting or taking laxatives, while those with Binge Eating Disorder do not purge after an episode of bingeing.
Binge Eating Disorder
Treatments for Eating Disorders
Cognitive Behavioural Therapy is a well-regarded evidence-based method for treating eating disorders. This therapy can be effective on its own, or combined with other courses of treatment for optimal results.
Eye Movement Desensitization & Reprocessing and mindfulness-based therapies are other eating disorder treatment approaches that have proven to be successful
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