File - Logan Class of December 2011
... - Eating, in a discrete period of time (any 2 hour period) an amount of food that is definitely larger than most people would eat during a similar period of time and under similar circumstance. - A sense of lack of control over eating during the episode (feeling that one cannot stop eating or contro ...
... - Eating, in a discrete period of time (any 2 hour period) an amount of food that is definitely larger than most people would eat during a similar period of time and under similar circumstance. - A sense of lack of control over eating during the episode (feeling that one cannot stop eating or contro ...
The importance of distinguishing between the different eating
... different types of ED. Furthermore, relationships with emotional problems such as depression and anxiety, have remained understudied as well. Since mood and anxiety disorders are highly comorbid across ED subtypes (e.g., Blinder et al., 2006; Hudson et al., 2007; Salbach-Andrae et al., 2008), it is ...
... different types of ED. Furthermore, relationships with emotional problems such as depression and anxiety, have remained understudied as well. Since mood and anxiety disorders are highly comorbid across ED subtypes (e.g., Blinder et al., 2006; Hudson et al., 2007; Salbach-Andrae et al., 2008), it is ...
Recovery from Bulimia: What Helps in Healing
... population (Hoek & van Hoeken, 2003). Estimates of the actual incidence of bulimia in young women, however, are much higher in community populations, closer to 1,500 per 100,000 women who either have the full diagnosis or subclinical levels of disordered eating (Hoek & van Hoeken, 2003). The physica ...
... population (Hoek & van Hoeken, 2003). Estimates of the actual incidence of bulimia in young women, however, are much higher in community populations, closer to 1,500 per 100,000 women who either have the full diagnosis or subclinical levels of disordered eating (Hoek & van Hoeken, 2003). The physica ...
ORTHOREXIA NERVOSA: PSYCHOLOGICAL DISORDER OR
... general conceptualization of ON as a “fixation on healthy food” (p. 9) and obsession for proper nutrition that focuses on food quality rather than quantity. Bratman was the first to coin the term ON in 1997, and none of the studies since have sought to expand or redefine this interpretation into an ...
... general conceptualization of ON as a “fixation on healthy food” (p. 9) and obsession for proper nutrition that focuses on food quality rather than quantity. Bratman was the first to coin the term ON in 1997, and none of the studies since have sought to expand or redefine this interpretation into an ...
Oral Scientific Paper Session IV Friday, May 3, 2013 2:30 – 4:00 p.m.
... Describe associations between family meal frequency and adolescent disordered eating behaviors. Understand how characteristics of the family-meal atmosphere and characteristics of the broader family environment moderate the protective nature of family meals in the development of disordered eatin ...
... Describe associations between family meal frequency and adolescent disordered eating behaviors. Understand how characteristics of the family-meal atmosphere and characteristics of the broader family environment moderate the protective nature of family meals in the development of disordered eatin ...
Dissociation and Compulsive Eating
... ABSTRACT. Numerous investigators have noted a correlation between compulsive eating patterns and dissociative symptoms, but there is no systematic explanation for how these two phenomena interact. It is not uncommon for patients with compulsive eating patterns to experience previously dissociated me ...
... ABSTRACT. Numerous investigators have noted a correlation between compulsive eating patterns and dissociative symptoms, but there is no systematic explanation for how these two phenomena interact. It is not uncommon for patients with compulsive eating patterns to experience previously dissociated me ...
Pharmacy and Eating Disorders - National Eating Disorders
... destructive eating behaviours, such as restrictive dieting or compulsive eating. Examples of disordered eating behaviours include: dieting, fasting or restrained eating, self-starvation, binge eating and self-induced purging. Substance misuse is common, and may include the use of diet pills, laxativ ...
... destructive eating behaviours, such as restrictive dieting or compulsive eating. Examples of disordered eating behaviours include: dieting, fasting or restrained eating, self-starvation, binge eating and self-induced purging. Substance misuse is common, and may include the use of diet pills, laxativ ...
Short-Term Intensive Family Therapy for Adolescent Eating
... Eating disorders (EDs) rank among the most pernicious of all psychiatric disorders, demonstrating marked medical complications alongside poor rates of treatment outcome and high rates of relapse (Bulik, Berkman, Brownley, Sedway, & Lohr, 2007; Steinhausen, 2002). However, despite adult populations b ...
... Eating disorders (EDs) rank among the most pernicious of all psychiatric disorders, demonstrating marked medical complications alongside poor rates of treatment outcome and high rates of relapse (Bulik, Berkman, Brownley, Sedway, & Lohr, 2007; Steinhausen, 2002). However, despite adult populations b ...
The Abnormal Psychology option
... illustrate behaviours found with some drugs of abuse, such as withdrawal symptoms and higher intake following abstinence. Related neurochemical changes commonly observed with drugs of abuse, including changes in dopamine and acetylcholine release can also be found with bingeing on sugar. These neuro ...
... illustrate behaviours found with some drugs of abuse, such as withdrawal symptoms and higher intake following abstinence. Related neurochemical changes commonly observed with drugs of abuse, including changes in dopamine and acetylcholine release can also be found with bingeing on sugar. These neuro ...
Eating Disorders in Scotland
... and weight that originates from a fear of being fat or from wanting to be thin. How people with anorexia nervosa see themselves is often at odds with how they are seen by others, and they will usually challenge the idea that they should gain weight. People with anorexia nervosa can see their weight ...
... and weight that originates from a fear of being fat or from wanting to be thin. How people with anorexia nervosa see themselves is often at odds with how they are seen by others, and they will usually challenge the idea that they should gain weight. People with anorexia nervosa can see their weight ...
ESCAP Expert Paper: New developments in the diagnosis and
... 20], which is consistently associated with more damage to well-being and delayed enrolment in treatment. DSM-IV items that implied a deliberate attitude of the patient and willful actions (such as “refusal to maintain body weight at or above a minimally normal weight for age and height” or “denial o ...
... 20], which is consistently associated with more damage to well-being and delayed enrolment in treatment. DSM-IV items that implied a deliberate attitude of the patient and willful actions (such as “refusal to maintain body weight at or above a minimally normal weight for age and height” or “denial o ...
OCD and Disordered Eating - Anxiety and Depression Association
... Exposure with response prevention (ERP) treatment strategies will be described for forms of OCD associated with eating. Comorbid eating disorders can interfere with ERP treatment progress. Strategies for treating OCD along with comorbid eating disorders will be presented. ...
... Exposure with response prevention (ERP) treatment strategies will be described for forms of OCD associated with eating. Comorbid eating disorders can interfere with ERP treatment progress. Strategies for treating OCD along with comorbid eating disorders will be presented. ...
eating-disorder-ks - Association of Community Mental Health
... • EDs have been documented in the medical literature since the early 1800s, when the “ideal” body shape differed from today. EDs are all about food and body image • Though the illness may start out as a desire to lose weight, they are mental illnesses that have little to do with food, eating, or app ...
... • EDs have been documented in the medical literature since the early 1800s, when the “ideal” body shape differed from today. EDs are all about food and body image • Though the illness may start out as a desire to lose weight, they are mental illnesses that have little to do with food, eating, or app ...
Personality profiles in Eating Disorders_ Further evidence of the
... EC and psychopathology may not be so clear-cut. For example, ED patients with a primarily restricting presentation scored higher on a self-report and cognitive measure of top-down control compared to those with a binging/purging presentation (Claes et al., 2010). One possibility is that EC has a cur ...
... EC and psychopathology may not be so clear-cut. For example, ED patients with a primarily restricting presentation scored higher on a self-report and cognitive measure of top-down control compared to those with a binging/purging presentation (Claes et al., 2010). One possibility is that EC has a cur ...
Binge eating disorder and depression: A
... scores of depression, and three times higher risk of suffering from depression than overweight women without BED. Overweight women with BED are more concerned about their physical body shape and weight than women without BED, which is typical of women with anorexia and bulimia. There has also been d ...
... scores of depression, and three times higher risk of suffering from depression than overweight women without BED. Overweight women with BED are more concerned about their physical body shape and weight than women without BED, which is typical of women with anorexia and bulimia. There has also been d ...
DSM V Mental Disorders
... OCD stands for Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder and is characterized by uncontrollable thoughts (obsessions) that lead to repetitive behaviors (compulsions) aimed at relieving the anxiety brought on by those thoughts. Common compulsions include excessive handwashing, repeated checking, nervous rituals, ...
... OCD stands for Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder and is characterized by uncontrollable thoughts (obsessions) that lead to repetitive behaviors (compulsions) aimed at relieving the anxiety brought on by those thoughts. Common compulsions include excessive handwashing, repeated checking, nervous rituals, ...
Chapter 14
... of physical disturbance become more evident. For example: Yellowing of the skin. Impaired organ functioning. Death (1 in 10). ...
... of physical disturbance become more evident. For example: Yellowing of the skin. Impaired organ functioning. Death (1 in 10). ...
Uppers, Downers and All Arounders
... • Marked by recurrent episodes of binge eating without vomiting, laxatives or other compensatory activities • People eat in response to emotional states rather than hunger • Used to modify emotions, especially anxiety, solitude, stress, and depression • Generally overweight • May suffer from high ch ...
... • Marked by recurrent episodes of binge eating without vomiting, laxatives or other compensatory activities • People eat in response to emotional states rather than hunger • Used to modify emotions, especially anxiety, solitude, stress, and depression • Generally overweight • May suffer from high ch ...
Eating Disorders
... disorder, substance abuse, eating disorder Biological base - Related to OCD (abnormalities in basal ganglia, motor control area) Behavioral base - Rooted in environmental cues, done to relieve tension Sociocultural – The result of feeling ...
... disorder, substance abuse, eating disorder Biological base - Related to OCD (abnormalities in basal ganglia, motor control area) Behavioral base - Rooted in environmental cues, done to relieve tension Sociocultural – The result of feeling ...
Emotional and Behavior Disorders
... cause distress or anxiety. You might try to get rid of them by performing a compulsion or ritual. These obsessions typically intrude when you're trying to think of or do other things. Obsessions often have themes to them, such as: Fear of contamination or dirt Having things orderly and symmetrical A ...
... cause distress or anxiety. You might try to get rid of them by performing a compulsion or ritual. These obsessions typically intrude when you're trying to think of or do other things. Obsessions often have themes to them, such as: Fear of contamination or dirt Having things orderly and symmetrical A ...
Eating Disorders in the School Context: What
... Parents cause eating disorders by being too controlling over their child. F To effectively help a youth with an eating disorder, the youth must first have intensive individual psychotherapy. F Eating disorder treatment for youth best happens at a slow and gentle pace. F Teaching youth about eating d ...
... Parents cause eating disorders by being too controlling over their child. F To effectively help a youth with an eating disorder, the youth must first have intensive individual psychotherapy. F Eating disorder treatment for youth best happens at a slow and gentle pace. F Teaching youth about eating d ...
Test 3
... 4) One reason for the gender discrepancy in the incidence of dissociative identity disorder may be that A) there is a hormonal dysregulation that usually accompanies this disorder, making it more common in women. B) women are more likely to feign this disorder. C) women are more susceptible to stres ...
... 4) One reason for the gender discrepancy in the incidence of dissociative identity disorder may be that A) there is a hormonal dysregulation that usually accompanies this disorder, making it more common in women. B) women are more likely to feign this disorder. C) women are more susceptible to stres ...
BULIMIA
... that bulimia among non-Caucasians—including Native Americans, Hispanics, African Americans, and Asians—is on the rise. Kathryn Zerbe, a psychoanalyst and a former faculty member at the Karl Menninger School of Psychiatry, attributes this to the aforementioned groups’ improved socioeconomic condition ...
... that bulimia among non-Caucasians—including Native Americans, Hispanics, African Americans, and Asians—is on the rise. Kathryn Zerbe, a psychoanalyst and a former faculty member at the Karl Menninger School of Psychiatry, attributes this to the aforementioned groups’ improved socioeconomic condition ...
A One-Day ACT Intervention for Problematic Eating Behaviors and
... Lack of acceptance of internal experiences was correlated with drive for thinness and body dissatisfaction, two features of eating disorders. Individuals who were less tolerant of their internal experiences were more likely to endorse values that are related to pleasing others. ...
... Lack of acceptance of internal experiences was correlated with drive for thinness and body dissatisfaction, two features of eating disorders. Individuals who were less tolerant of their internal experiences were more likely to endorse values that are related to pleasing others. ...
Document
... and social/cultural factors • Biological components • Physical, biochemical, genetic factors • Psychological components • Patterns of thinking, coping skills, perceptions, emotional intelligence, temperament, personality characteristics • Social/cultural components • Family relationships, support sy ...
... and social/cultural factors • Biological components • Physical, biochemical, genetic factors • Psychological components • Patterns of thinking, coping skills, perceptions, emotional intelligence, temperament, personality characteristics • Social/cultural components • Family relationships, support sy ...
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.