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Eating Disorders

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In a society that discriminates against people, particularly women, who do not look slender, many people find they cannot - or think they cannot - meet society's standards through normal, healthy eating habits and often fall victim to eating disorders.

Types of eating disorders | Who it affects | Physical effects
Warning signs | Treatment | What else to do?

Types of eating disorders
There are two common types of eating disorders:

People who are bulimic eventually recognize they have a problem. People who are anorexic will deny their behavior is abnormal. People who are bulimic usually maintain a near- normal weight, while people who are anorexic become shockingly thin. A person with anorexia may turn to bulimia as an alternative form of weight control. This is called buli marexia.

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Who it affects
While eating disorders affect both men and women of all ages, the typical person with an eating disorder is a woman whose abnormal eating behavior began in her teenage years. She is most likely a perfectionist and a high achiever, concerned about her appearance and how she is perceived by others, but emotionally insecure, often frightened, and lonely.

The woman with bulimia binge-eats in response to feelings of loneliness, anxiety, or anger. Feeling guilty over subsequent weight gain, she turns to purging as a way to alleviate those feelings. The cycle of binging and purging becomes a part of her daily life and she may binge just so she can purge. This cycle continues until she recognizes she needs help.

The woman with anorexia may equate being the best with being the thinnest because dieting is something she finds she can do successfully. She may do this in reaction to a fear of growing up or in rebellion against parents or other authority figures.

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Physical effects
The abnormal eating habits of someone with an eating disorder can seriously affect his or her physical health:

Because people with bulimia use food as an escape, they may turn to other substances, such as alcohol or drugs, to both escape and to break the binge-purge cycle. This practice can lead to substance abuse and addiction.

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Warning signs
Any of the following may be a warning that someone is bulimic or anorexic:

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Treatment
Both bulimia and anorexia can be treated with a combination of medical and psychological approaches to deal with the physical effects of abnormal eating and the underlying psychological problems that may have caused it.

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What else to do
People with an eating disorder or any mental illness also face a stigma attached to these illnesses by society. This stigma causes discrimination against people with a mental illness in employment, housing, health care, and the ability to buy health insurance. By learning more about mental illness and the effectiveness of treatment, this discrimination can end, removing the stigma that acts as a barrier to successful treatment.

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