Diet Mind
... provide a healthy example for a child or adolescent. Sometimes this can increase the desire to be in control of eating, or create an obsession with weight and size that can lead to eating disorders. ...
... provide a healthy example for a child or adolescent. Sometimes this can increase the desire to be in control of eating, or create an obsession with weight and size that can lead to eating disorders. ...
Frequency of Eating Disorders
... • Eating disorders are severe disturbances in eating behavior that result from the sufferer’s obsessive fear of gaining weight. • DSM-IV-TR lists two major types of eating disorders: anorexia nervosa and bulimia nervosa. • The most obvious characteristic of anorexia nervosa is extreme emaciation, or ...
... • Eating disorders are severe disturbances in eating behavior that result from the sufferer’s obsessive fear of gaining weight. • DSM-IV-TR lists two major types of eating disorders: anorexia nervosa and bulimia nervosa. • The most obvious characteristic of anorexia nervosa is extreme emaciation, or ...
040899 Eating Disorders - New England Journal of Medicine
... low percentage of body fat, inadequate intake of dietary fats, excessive exercise, or depression or may be an adverse effect of a psychotropic medication. Bone loss is a serious clinical problem that may accompany amenorrhea and undernutrition, and it should be assessed by bone densitometry. In 50 p ...
... low percentage of body fat, inadequate intake of dietary fats, excessive exercise, or depression or may be an adverse effect of a psychotropic medication. Bone loss is a serious clinical problem that may accompany amenorrhea and undernutrition, and it should be assessed by bone densitometry. In 50 p ...
Discussion Questions
... Definition: To make better or more tolerable. Context: Psychologists hope therapy will help ameliorate the anxiety that makes eating disorders worse. anorexia nervosa Definition: A serious disorder in eating behavior primarily of young women in their teens and early 20s that is characterized by a pa ...
... Definition: To make better or more tolerable. Context: Psychologists hope therapy will help ameliorate the anxiety that makes eating disorders worse. anorexia nervosa Definition: A serious disorder in eating behavior primarily of young women in their teens and early 20s that is characterized by a pa ...
Eating disorders: About more than food
... building a private practice in Westport ([email protected], 203-515-6311). She specializes in body dysmorphic issues (an obsessive preoccupation that some aspect of one’s appearance needs to be “fixed”), which affects males and females equally. Both Tripodi and Kleifield believe social media have made ...
... building a private practice in Westport ([email protected], 203-515-6311). She specializes in body dysmorphic issues (an obsessive preoccupation that some aspect of one’s appearance needs to be “fixed”), which affects males and females equally. Both Tripodi and Kleifield believe social media have made ...
Somatoform disorders
... Risk Factors in Eating Disorders Environmental media images teasing from peers ...
... Risk Factors in Eating Disorders Environmental media images teasing from peers ...
Body Image Outline
... • Bones can become thin and brittle from lack of calcium • Decrease in blood pressure and body ...
... • Bones can become thin and brittle from lack of calcium • Decrease in blood pressure and body ...
glt-9-biomedical-individual-and-group-approaches-to
... group, there is a chance that they may learn negative behaviours or strategies from one another, which is counter-productive to the therapy. For instance, an eating disorder client might find ways of making it look like they’ve gained weight, or hiding food that they’ve been given to eat. They may a ...
... group, there is a chance that they may learn negative behaviours or strategies from one another, which is counter-productive to the therapy. For instance, an eating disorder client might find ways of making it look like they’ve gained weight, or hiding food that they’ve been given to eat. They may a ...
AP6_Lecture_Ch11
... Bruch argues that eating disorders are the result of disturbed mother–child interactions which lead to serious ego deficiencies in the child and ...
... Bruch argues that eating disorders are the result of disturbed mother–child interactions which lead to serious ego deficiencies in the child and ...
學系別
... predictor of one’s future criminal behavior is this person’s _______. a) I.Q. b) age c) culture d) past criminal behavior 20. Which of the following is the critical difference between anorexia nervosa and bulimia nervosa that can be used to distinguish these two disorders? a) symptoms of amenorrhea ...
... predictor of one’s future criminal behavior is this person’s _______. a) I.Q. b) age c) culture d) past criminal behavior 20. Which of the following is the critical difference between anorexia nervosa and bulimia nervosa that can be used to distinguish these two disorders? a) symptoms of amenorrhea ...
ANALYSIS OF MULTI-INSTRUMENTAL ASSESSMENT OF EATING
... Introduction: The origin and course of eating disorders constitute a multifactorial etiopathology. This is why it is important to consider the psychological, developmental, biological and socio - cultural evaluation of each patient.The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual DSM IV - TR (APA, 1994) distin ...
... Introduction: The origin and course of eating disorders constitute a multifactorial etiopathology. This is why it is important to consider the psychological, developmental, biological and socio - cultural evaluation of each patient.The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual DSM IV - TR (APA, 1994) distin ...
Anorexia Nervosa: From Latency to Geriatrics
... 21 Espina A, Ochoa de Alda I, Ortego A. Dyadic adjustment in parents of daughters with an eating disorder. Eur Eat Disord Rev 2003;11:349-362. 22 Eisler I. The empirical and theoretical base of family therapy and multiple family day therapy for adolescent anorexia nervosa. J Fam Ther 2005;27:104-131 ...
... 21 Espina A, Ochoa de Alda I, Ortego A. Dyadic adjustment in parents of daughters with an eating disorder. Eur Eat Disord Rev 2003;11:349-362. 22 Eisler I. The empirical and theoretical base of family therapy and multiple family day therapy for adolescent anorexia nervosa. J Fam Ther 2005;27:104-131 ...
Unit XII: Abnormal Behavior
... • A condition in which a normal-weight person (usually an adolescent woman) continuously loses weight but still feels overweight. ...
... • A condition in which a normal-weight person (usually an adolescent woman) continuously loses weight but still feels overweight. ...
Eating Disorders
... Bulimia Nervosa is characterized by a secretive cycle of binge eating followed by purging. Bulimia includes eating large amounts of food--more than most people would eat in one meal--in short periods of time, then getting rid of the food and calories through vomiting, laxative abuse, or overexer ...
... Bulimia Nervosa is characterized by a secretive cycle of binge eating followed by purging. Bulimia includes eating large amounts of food--more than most people would eat in one meal--in short periods of time, then getting rid of the food and calories through vomiting, laxative abuse, or overexer ...
What are Eating Disorders?
... Verbal preoccupation with food, weight, and shape Rapid or persistent decline or increase in food intake Excessive or compulsive exercise patterns Purging; restricting; binge eating; compulsive eating; abuse of diet pills, laxatives, diuretics, or emetics Denial of food and eating problems ...
... Verbal preoccupation with food, weight, and shape Rapid or persistent decline or increase in food intake Excessive or compulsive exercise patterns Purging; restricting; binge eating; compulsive eating; abuse of diet pills, laxatives, diuretics, or emetics Denial of food and eating problems ...
Feeding and eating disorders
... Persistent restriction of energy intake leading to significantly low body weight (in context of what is minimally expected for age, sex, developmental trajectory, and physical health) . Either an intense fear of gaining weight or of becoming fat, or persistent behaviour that interferes with weigh ...
... Persistent restriction of energy intake leading to significantly low body weight (in context of what is minimally expected for age, sex, developmental trajectory, and physical health) . Either an intense fear of gaining weight or of becoming fat, or persistent behaviour that interferes with weigh ...
Mental Disorders
... • Leads to unhealthful weight loss and death • Commonly occur during the teen years • Puberty, body changes, and media cause some teens to put pressure on themselves to look a certain way • Common among girls but affect boys, too ...
... • Leads to unhealthful weight loss and death • Commonly occur during the teen years • Puberty, body changes, and media cause some teens to put pressure on themselves to look a certain way • Common among girls but affect boys, too ...
Surveying the Effectiveness of Dialectical Behavioral Therapy on
... Sadock's.2007. quoted from Rezaee). Bulimia is a mental disorder that is identified by eating a big amount of food in a short time and then purifying extra calories by vomiting or other extremist actions (Halgin RP, Whitborne SK, 2002). According to DSM V, the main criteria for bulimia are: overeati ...
... Sadock's.2007. quoted from Rezaee). Bulimia is a mental disorder that is identified by eating a big amount of food in a short time and then purifying extra calories by vomiting or other extremist actions (Halgin RP, Whitborne SK, 2002). According to DSM V, the main criteria for bulimia are: overeati ...
Eating disorders
... Vomiting after eating exposes the teeth to stomach acid causing decay. It can also cause sore throats, heart problems and abdominal pain. ...
... Vomiting after eating exposes the teeth to stomach acid causing decay. It can also cause sore throats, heart problems and abdominal pain. ...
Rieger Chapter Summaries PowerPoint 06
... More large controlled trials of psychotherapy are needed While CBT is effective for bulimia, much room for improvement Approaches to eating disorders and obesity need to be integrated Large gap between presence of eating disorder and diagnosis and ...
... More large controlled trials of psychotherapy are needed While CBT is effective for bulimia, much room for improvement Approaches to eating disorders and obesity need to be integrated Large gap between presence of eating disorder and diagnosis and ...
Diagnosis and Management of Eating Disorders - UCLA Med-Peds
... initial diagnosis of anorexia nervosa – since that time, she has had one inpatient admission and 3 partial hospitalizations – last at age 19. Her weight has been stable at 135 for the past 2 years On exam, you noticed parotid enlargement, and scars on her knuckles ...
... initial diagnosis of anorexia nervosa – since that time, she has had one inpatient admission and 3 partial hospitalizations – last at age 19. Her weight has been stable at 135 for the past 2 years On exam, you noticed parotid enlargement, and scars on her knuckles ...
7 - NetUnion
... used self-report instrument for measuring general psychopathology and contains 90 problem items rated on a 5-point Likert scale and comprising nine sub-scales: somatization, obsession compulsion, interpersonal sensitivity, depression, anxiety, hostility, phobic anxiety, paranoid ideation and psycho ...
... used self-report instrument for measuring general psychopathology and contains 90 problem items rated on a 5-point Likert scale and comprising nine sub-scales: somatization, obsession compulsion, interpersonal sensitivity, depression, anxiety, hostility, phobic anxiety, paranoid ideation and psycho ...
Changing Brains Changes the Game: Clinical Relevance of Habit
... behaviors/eating (negative reinforcement). When we look at transdiagnostic disease traits such as compulsivity, we begin to appreciate what seemingly disparate illnesses have in common. This would be merely an academic exercise if not for translational research. Several habit-breaking approaches wit ...
... behaviors/eating (negative reinforcement). When we look at transdiagnostic disease traits such as compulsivity, we begin to appreciate what seemingly disparate illnesses have in common. This would be merely an academic exercise if not for translational research. Several habit-breaking approaches wit ...
Disorders of Infancy, Childhood, & Adolescence
... • Enuresis: 15-20% of 5-year-olds 5% of 10-year-olds • Encopresis: .3-8% of children ...
... • Enuresis: 15-20% of 5-year-olds 5% of 10-year-olds • Encopresis: .3-8% of children ...
Bulimia nervosa
Bulimia nervosa, also known as simply bulimia, is an eating disorder characterized by binge eating followed by purging. Binge eating refers to eating a large amount of food in a short amount of time. Purging refers to attempts to rid oneself of the food consumed. This may be done by vomiting or taking a laxative. Other efforts to lose weight may include the use of diuretics, stimulants, fasting, or excessive exercise. Most people with bulimia have a normal weight. The forcing of vomiting may result in thickened skin on the knuckles and breakdown of the teeth. Bulimia is frequently associated with other mental disorders such as depression, anxiety, and problems with drugs or alcohol. There is also a higher risk of suicide and self-harm.Bulimia is more common among those who have a close relative with the condition. The percentage risk that is estimated to be due to genetics is between 30% and 80%. Other risk factors for the disease include psychological stress, cultural pressure for a certain body type, poor self-esteem, and obesity. Living in a culture that promotes dieting and having parents that worry about weight are also risks. Diagnosis is based on a person's medical history, however this is difficult as people are usually secretive about their binge eating and purging habits. Furthermore, the diagnosis of anorexia nervosa takes precedence over that of bulimia. Other similar disorders include binge eating disorder, Kleine-Levin syndrome, and borderline personality disorder.Cognitive behavioral therapy is the primary treatment for bulimia. Antidepressants of the selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRI) or tricyclic antidepressant class may have a modest benefit. While outcomes with bulimia are typically better than in those of anorexia, the risk of death among those affected is higher than that of the general population. At 10 years after receiving treatment about 50% of people are fully recovered.Globally, bulimia was estimated to affect 6.5 million people in 2013. About 1% of young women have bulimia at a given point in time and about 2% to 3% of women have the condition at some point in their lives. The condition is less common in the developing world. Bulimia is about nine times more likely to occur in women than men. Among women, rates are highest in young adults. Bulimia was named and first described by the British psychiatrist Gerald Russell in 1979.