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Showing posts with label Nervosa. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nervosa. Show all posts

Monday, May 13, 2013

Increasing Structure in Outpatient Treatment of Anorexia Nervosa and Bulimia

Increasing Structure in Outpatient Treatment of Anorexia Nervosa and Bulimia


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Medical Evaluation and Structure

Increasing Structure in Outpatient Treatment of Anorexia Nervosa and Bulimia

Anorexic Diet

Extreme Anorexic Speaks Out About the Eating Disorder





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Video Clips. Duration : 2.35 Mins.



Extreme Anorexic Speaks Out About the Eating Disorder



Extreme Anorexic Speaks Out About the Eating Disorder SUBSCRIBE: http://bit.ly/Oc61Hj Extreme anorexic Valeria Levitin weighs just four stone after battling ...

Extreme Anorexic Speaks Out About the Eating Disorder

Extreme Anorexic Speaks Out About the Eating Disorder


Extreme Anorexic Speaks Out About the Eating Disorder

Extreme Anorexic Speaks Out About the Eating Disorder

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Calorie Shifting Diet Example - A 3 Day Meal Plan Using the Principles of Calorie Shifting


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If you have stumbled upon this article you must have heard the positive testimonials from calorie shifting users. I am going to provide a calorie shifting diet example for 3 days using the most popular calorie shifting diet plan available Fat Loss 4 Idiots you so you know exactly how it works.

Calorie Shifting Diet Example - A 3 Day Meal Plan Using the Principles of Calorie Shifting

Anorexic Diet

Extreme Anorexic Speaks Out About the Eating Disorder





Click Here FLV MPlayer - Free Download

Tube. Duration : 2.35 Mins.



Extreme Anorexic Speaks Out About the Eating Disorder



Extreme Anorexic Speaks Out About the Eating Disorder SUBSCRIBE: http://bit.ly/Oc61Hj Extreme anorexic Valeria Levitin weighs just four stone after battling ...

Extreme Anorexic Speaks Out About the Eating Disorder

Extreme Anorexic Speaks Out About the Eating Disorder


Extreme Anorexic Speaks Out About the Eating Disorder

Extreme Anorexic Speaks Out About the Eating Disorder

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Extreme Anorexic Speaks Out About the Eating Disorder SUBSCRIBE: http://bit.ly/Oc61Hj Extreme anorexic Valeria Levitin weighs just four stone after battling ...




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I have borrowed this 3 days sample meal from the website Lose 9 in 11 Days which you can click on the link below. This is a non-vegetarian example, for a vegetarian option you can also click on the link below to go to their site.


Anorexic Diet

Calorie Shifting Diet Example - A 3 Day Meal Plan Using the Principles of Calorie Shifting



You can eat the meals in any order unless specified otherwise such as in Day 2. Also note there are no limits on portions and you don't have to eat everything that is suggested in every meal. Here is the 3 day calorie shifting diet example



Calorie Shifting Diet Example - A 3 Day Meal Plan Using the Principles of Calorie Shifting

Day 1

Meal #1:

o Hard Boiled Eggs
o Roast Beef Slices
o Bowl of Mixed Vegetables

Meal #2:

o Scrambled Eggs
o Broiled Sea Bass

Meal #3:

o Cottage Cheese
o Sausage Links

Meal #4:

o Tuna Salad Plate
o Broiled Orange Roughy
o Fresh Pears

Day 2 - Fruit Day

Meal #1 - for Meal #1 you must eat a deli meat sandwich made from the below ingredients only:

o 2 regular sized pieces of sandwich bread
o Any deli style meat such as roast beef, ham, pastrami or turkey
o Lettuce, tomatoes, and onions are optional

For Meal #2, Meal #3 and Meal #4 you must eat fresh fruit chosen from the below list only:

o Oranges
o Pears
o Apples
o Grapes
o Peaches
o Plums
o Strawberries
o Kiwis
o Grapefruit

Day 3

Meal #1:

o Pastrami Slices
o Delicious Shrimp

Meal #2:

o Chicken
o Macadamia Nuts

Meal #3:

o Turkey Slices
o Regular Cheese Slices
o Banana Milk Shake

Meal #4:

o Hard Boiled Eggs
o Roast Beef Slices

The biggest problem that people have to coming up with interesting creative ways to cook or maybe they don't like the strange food combinations. That is understandable. You can actually regenerate meals using the Fat Loss 4 Idiots Diet Generator until you come up with a meal you like! As long as you pick up from the day that you left off. Let's say that on Day 3 you don't like the meals, you can regenerate a meal plan and replace the Day 3 from your old menu.


Calorie Shifting Diet Example - A 3 Day Meal Plan Using the Principles of Calorie Shifting









Extreme Anorexic Speaks Out About the Eating Disorder SUBSCRIBE: http://bit.ly/Oc61Hj Extreme anorexic Valeria Levitin weighs just four stone after battling ...




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It is important to have clients see a physician for a thorough physical examination, including comprehensive lab work, to assure their medical safety while outpatient psychotherapy treatment is taking place. Addressing any medical risks and subsequent medical needs with a physician is an essential structure for outpatient therapy for eating disorders. This medical attention is an important way to increase the professional presence and support for the client in a more multi-disciplinary approach to treatment. It is important for you, as the therapist, to identify physicians with whom you can have ongoing discussions, at least on a periodic basis, to talk about assessment, medical needs, and progress of these individual clients. It is important for both of you to be saying the same things to the client. In the medical evaluation, it is important to do the following:


Anorexic Diet

Increasing Structure in Outpatient Treatment of Anorexia Nervosa and Bulimia



- Carefully examine lab work, to identify any potential electrolyte imbalances, including sodium and potassium irregularities, which could cause heart arrhythmia or other organ damage.
- Address gastrointestinal difficulties or irregularities including slowing of gastric emptying, which occurs in many eating disorder clients, as well as extreme patterns of diarrhea, constipation, bloating, and esophageal damage such as dilation or rupture, constant sore throat, or reflux.
- Explore coronary problems and potential risks associated with long-term eating disorders which can include significant arrhythmia, chest pain, slow heart rate, low blood pressure, reduced body temperature, weakness, and fatigue. EKG or other tests may be warranted.
- Discuss amenorrhea or other irregularities in the menstrual cycle and closely examine histories of being underweight for body type or extreme weight loss or changes over time.
- Look for dental and bone problems like osteoporosis, tooth decay, and gum erosion, and question for constant headaches, fatigue, and abdominal pain.



Increasing Structure in Outpatient Treatment of Anorexia Nervosa and Bulimia

It is also important for the physician to address the need for psychiatric medication such as antidepressant or anti-anxiety medication for those who are suffering with an eating disorder. In the assessment, you or the physician can make a referral to a psychiatrist for a complete evaluation, or your client's selected physician can address and monitor the use of the psychiatric medication.

Dietary Intervention and Structure

When considering treating a client with eating disorder behavior, it is essential to have the proper dietary guidance and consultation in order to help the client successfully address the nutritional aspects of the eating disorder. It would be wise to find a dietitian who has worked with eating disorder clients and has expertise that will ensure proper treatment.

By utilizing a dietitian you will not have to expend as much energy talking to the client about food and diet. Also, clients tend to believe dietitians more than therapists with regard to guidance on normal body weight, dietary concerns, and living in a healthy way. Utilizing a dietitian also increases the size of the client's support network, offers additional intervention, and provides one more member of the treatment team working together with the therapist in taking care of the client's needs.

A dietitian, with the right set of expertise and skills, will be able to provide treatment for your client in ways that you will not be able to. A dietitian will be able to provide a structure for eating that will allow you to focus mainly on the emotional and problematic areas of the client's life.

When looking for a dietitian to work with outpatient clients who have eating disorders, consider the following:

- Find a dietitian who has had experience working with eating disorder clients and who treats them differently than clients with other dietary issues.
- Look for a dietitian who can provide structure and yet simplicity in her approach to eating disorder clients - one who does not focus on dieting, watching fat grams, and counting calories, but who understands the obsessive nature of eating disorders and can provide needed structure and guidance without increasing obsessive ruminations.
- Find a dietitian who is familiar with the exchange program, food pyramid, and intuitive eating and can mix and blend these approaches to meet the needs of her eating disorder clients.

A good dietitian is an invaluable asset to a therapist in the treatment of a client with eating disorders.

Emotional Support and Structure

Emotional structures and support for the client can come in many forms. Emotional support can come from providing material goods, including and accepting a client, creating a sense of belonging in a group, offering referrals to other sources, and by just "being there" for them. Emotional support can be significantly increased by utilizing family and friends in the structure for clients. It is easier to provide emotional support on a regular and consistent basis if one has a structure or a model from which to work. It is important to create an emotional structure that will allow consistent and regular emotional support. Ideas for Creating Structure for Emotional Support:

- Ask the eating disordered client, family members, or friends for help. Ask them to contribute in maintaining a home and relationship - to take part in tasks in the family system or in the regular activities of friendship. It is important for a client to feel needed and to feel that they have "something to offer." Clients often feel like a burden and feel guilty and "psychologically in debt." It is not only "okay" for family members or other loved ones to ask the client to help them, but it is important. No matter how simple the request is, whether it is to sweep the floor, take someone for a ride, or listen to someone else's struggles, there is a need for everyone to feel important and to feel that they are not only receiving, but are giving to others, and that what they have to offer is of worth.
- It is important to help family members and friends ask the client how they are doing emotionally and ask about their emotional condition on a regular basis. It is also important in these discussions for family members and friends to express their feelings to the client, and explain that the invitation is to have an emotional dialogue and communication rather than just talking about thoughts or behaviors. Bringing structure and regularity to this emotional sharing, such as making a commitment for family, friends, and loved ones to "check in" on a daily basis to see how the client is doing, may help provide some structure with the emotional support.
- Helping family members and friends delineate a "small role" or a small task in helping to support a client in the recovery process is important. It will help family members and friends feel less helpless, less resentful, and less panicked if they have their own small way of helping, no matter how insignificant it might seem. Having a specific, small role is helpful. For example, in a family a younger child might be asked to just ask the eating disorder client to play with them a couple of times a week as a way to include the client in the family.
- Family meetings can be a helpful way to structure emotional support. Topics in these meetings might include: discussing jobs; roles; accountability; making refinements; clarifying "double messages," confusion, or incongruence; and giving a constant reminder or invitation to talk and give reassurance that family or friends are present and available to the client.
- Asking clients to express emotion on a regular basis is important. This might be on a daily basis. Forms of expression may include writing, letters, journaling, talking on the phone, talking face-to-face, meditating, relaxation, or imagery.

Behavioral Structure

Behavioral assignments within the context of outpatient therapy are an important component of structure for eating disorders. They can also be the most difficult to utilize and sustain in an outpatient setting. Behavioral structure can help a client to begin to feel a sense of control over her disorder and to have hope for the possibilities of getting well.

It is helpful to use concrete and specific structures in the early months of outpatient therapy. Obviously, you have to assess the appropriateness of the behavioral intervention for the specific client, but the key to behavioral structure is the emphasis on commitment, follow-through, and accountability because avoidance is a major coping strategy for eating disorder clients. It has been our observation that nearly all women with eating disorders need some behavioral structure. They will benefit if they know that the structure is there to support them and help them in their recovery.

Family Intervention and Structure

It is important to involve families in treatment wherever possible. This means that the client should be treated, even in individual therapy, with the family context in mind. Eating disorder clients are a part of the family system. Consequently, eating disorder treatment requires a recognition of the role or function of the eating disorder within that family system. Families can become involved in treatment in the following ways:

- They can become educated about eating disorders by reading books and articles.
- They can attend support groups if they are available. Support groups can provide an atmosphere that allows family members to talk about the stress, emotional damage, and difficulties an eating disorder has caused them. Support groups are a good outlet where family members can express their feelings and deal with their own personal pain without attacking their loved one.
- They can be involved in therapy. Initially, this may be difficult, depending on where the eating disorder client is in the recovery process. When appropriate, involve the family in therapy to empower them to deal with the eating disorder. Teach them how to support their loved one through recovery, develop correct boundary systems, and look at the inter-generational roles that have been handed down and which can impact family dynamics. Teach them to look at their own personal issues with self-esteem and selfimage, as well as any other issues with body and food, or other family dynamics that can trigger or cause the eating disorder to worsen.
- It is important to address family rules about food, body image, societal image, and expectations about how one is to live and eat. If problems are found in the family system, it would be advisable to make recommendations for further treatment for family members, whether individually or otherwise, to aid in the family's healing.
- Multiple family therapy is another valuable option for treatment. If you have several clients who are struggling with eating disorders, it might be helpful to have families come together to learn from each other about eating disorders and their impact on them as families and on the clients. Often, clients learn a great deal from watching other families go through the same dynamics that they are personally going through with their own family.
- In family treatment, it is important that family members know what their roles are in helping a client get over their eating disorder. Everyone should have a job, no matter how small and insignificant it may seem. Having a job helps family members feel less helpless and therefore less resentful and panicked, and can help put them in a better place to help the client in ways that are truly needed. The job of one small child in helping an eating disorder client might simply be saying "I love you" to the client on a daily basis.
- Family meetings where the client moderates the discussion about jobs, roles, accountability, and making refinements helps the family to feel empowered and helps the client to have self-respect.
- Family council meetings are also an important means of helping the client and family members decipher and get rid of double messages and confusion, and begin to communicate clearly, directly, and more effectively with each other.
- It is important for the family to provide meals served on a daily and regular basis. It is also important that these mealtimes not force the client to eat, but provide structure, security, regularity, expectations, and agreements which will help the client eat.

Eating disorder clients need to be treated with the family in mind in their therapy, regardless of how much face-to-face family therapy takes place. Make sure the family is not blamed for the eating disorder. The vast majority of parents of a child with an eating disorder are good parents who extend themselves on behalf of their children. The client's goal in treatment should be to become emotionally independent while learning to enjoy meaningful connections with family members.

Group Intervention and Structure

Group therapy is one modality that is important in the comprehensive, multimodal, and multidisciplinary team approach for outpatients suffering from anorexia and bulimia. There are many types of groups possible including support groups, structured groups, themeoriented groups, and experiential therapy groups. The mainstay for group treatment in eating disorder outpatient treatment is the open process oriented therapy group. There are many advantages to group intervention for eating disorder clients working in an outpatient setting. In addition, group treatment rounds out a full outpatient treatment program which includes individual therapy, group therapy, family support groups, medical treatment, and dietary counseling. Some research has suggested that clients with eating disorders may respond better to homogeneous rather than heterogeneous psychiatric therapy groups. Some of the advantages of group intervention are as follows:

- It allows women with eating disorders to be exposed to other women with eating disorders. They no longer feel like they are alone in their struggles and conflicts.
- It allows clients to feel connected and gives a sense of belonging, which they have often not felt for a long time.
- It allows them to learn things from each other that they cannot learn from a therapist or in individual therapy.
- They can see other clients struggling, which can be a constant teacher and reminder of what they don't want, thus leading to positive motivation toward recovery
- They have the opportunity to see others' successes and victories in the recovery process, which increases levels of hopefulness about the possibility for getting well themselves.
- It allows for one more meeting time per week to offer more structure and support, which helps clients maintain their progress between less frequent individual therapy sessions.
- "It takes one to know one," is a prophetic clich for group therapy with clients who have eating disorders. Since they know each other's patterns, thoughts, and games, they have the opportunity to give more accurate confrontation and help each other become more honest.
- Clients have opportunity for healing from shame and guilt which surrounds their eating disorder habits, past mistakes, or history of abuse by revealing what previously were secrets and feeling love and acceptance despite past difficulties, behaviors, or problems. Sharing in this manner can lead to feelings of acceptance, comfort, and healing.

Running outpatient eating disorder groups can be challenging, especially since there is a high propensity for people with characterological disorders to end up in these groups. As many as 30% of those suffering with eating disorders severe enough to require inpatient treatment have personality disorders. It can also be challenging due to differences in levels of motivation and levels of recovery. Some people ready to work hard in therapy may feel that group therapy becomes encumbered by those who do not seem able or ready to take advantage of that format. Still, group therapy is very important for outpatient treatment. Due to the concerns and struggles in running an outpatient eating disorder group, the following guidelines and suggestions are given:

- Do screening with participants in group to ensure they have an adequate level of motivation prior to being allowed in the group.
- Make sure that the clients are involved in regular individual therapy and other modalities of full, comprehensive outpatient treatment before they are allowed to participate in a therapy group.
- While the client is involved in outpatient group therapy, individual therapists and group therapists should collaborate to capitalize on the therapeutic progress in both. Collaboration will allow accelerated progress in treatment.
- Care should be taken not to allow "war stories" to be shared in group. New members in a group may tend to use the group format to compare eating disorder behaviors in an inappropriate and unhealthy way.
- A structured group program such as Dialectical Behavioral Therapy created by Marsha Linehan (Understanding Borderline Personality Disorder, The Guilford Press, 1995) may be useful in allowing clients to take responsibility for the work that gets done in group.
- If the group is having difficulty generating work, the therapist should feel free to create structure and generate some energy and work in the group to help clients get through any slow times that occur.

Issues to Address in Outpatient Therapy

The following issues are important to address in treatment of clients with an eating disorder:

Relationships: Relationship issues and patterns are important to address in the beginning phases of therapy. It is important for an outpatient therapist to intervene in relationships before the client gets to a place where she is frequently stuck and where family relationships are very seriously damaged. The eating disorder can create such emotion, tension, dishonesty, anger, resentment, hurt, and misunderstanding in relationships that it is important to begin early to involve loved ones of the client so they can become a more supportive, firm, and loving system for the client. It is important, early in the relationship, to build trust with the client and to "get emotional money in the bank." This is very important due to the trust difficulties typically seen with eating disorder clients. It is important to build a relationship so that the difficult work can be done and you can model healthy dynamics and relationships.

Address the negative mind: It is important early on to teach the client about "a negative cognitive set." You can teach clients a cognitive behavioral approach to understanding the difference between thoughts and feelings and recognizing the impact thoughts have on their feelings. You can help them become aware of the negative mind and the negative self-talk that happens inside, and the damage this does to their self-esteem by fostering self-hatred and negative feelings about themselves. In the same frame, it is important to separate the client from her eating disorder and help her learn to fight against the negative mind and the eating disorder instead of fighting against herself.

Spiritual connections: Many clients have spiritual difficulties due to feeling guilt, unworthiness, and the lack of closeness to a Higher Power or anyone else. Due to poor relationships in the past, old pain often gets in the way of believing that there could be a loving God who cares about them and is not manipulative, abusive, or would not reject them because of their felt unworthiness. Clients often push people away and withdraw, not only from their relationships with themselves and others, but also from their relationship with "a higher power." Spiritual connectedness gives the client a sense of purpose and value in themselves and a belief and hope in their innate ability to recover and to find purpose and meaning in life.

Perfectionism and personal expectations: Often, persons with eating disorders struggle with a need to become more and more perfect-they believe that if they could just "do it the right way" or if they could just control their world, then everything would be okay. This issue needs to be addressed in treatment to help them become less rigid and more capable of understanding their own personal expectations, as well as what they believe others' expectations of them are. They need to understand how perfectionism interferes with their growth and development. They also need to see how this contributes to their need for the eating disorder. Since no one can be perfect, clients' inability to achieve that goal creates such dissonance and feelings of failure that they will use the eating disorder to cope with these feelings. Since perfectionism is their solution to beliefs that they are "not good enough", addressing these beliefs directly is important.

Adaptive functions of eating disorders: It is helpful to go over the adaptive functions of eating disorders with clients to show them that their eating disorder has become a way to mask or cope with their pain, their feelings, their stresses, and their fears. Addressing and helping them understand what it is they are trying to avoid in life can give them insight and help increase their ability to deal with their life in a healthy, functional way. They will begin to see that the effects of coping in a healthy way are far more positive and good for them than hiding and running away through their eating disorder and other behaviors.

Acknowledging, understanding and accepting feelings: It is important to help clients begin to feel again, since they have been so adept at shutting off their feelings. One way to do this is to have the client journal and keep a diary so that they can become more aware of their thoughts and feelings. This will also provide more insight into issues in their lives and their relationship to the felt need to restrict, to binge, or purge. Allowing feelings without self judgment for those feelings is critical.

Expanding their world instead of constricting: This notion goes along with relationship development but goes further in terms of helping clients look at other facets of life and other support systems they could develop in order to expand rather than constrict their world. This exercise helps clients feel more hopeful and encourages them to expand their talents and look for good things in themselves and in their relationships with others instead of shutting things out of their lives that could bring them joy. This exercise also encourages them to take risks by stepping out of their comfort zones which helps them to build more confidence. Helping clients find again their dreams and passions can expand their possibilities, excitement for life, and hope for the future.

Identity and attention needs: Often, a woman's eating disorder is an attempt to develop a sense of identity-a niche for herself where she can be special and exceptional. These issues must be addressed for the client to be able to understand the destructiveness of the eating disorder. They need to be able to address how their needs are met through illness and that their needs can be also met through wellness.

Walk the talk: Help clients develop more congruency in what they say and what they do. Part of therapy must focus on helping clients develop more congruent behavior that matches "the talk." Honesty, integrity, and self respect come out of efforts to be congruent.

Predicting treatment ups and downs: It is important that clients be given an understanding early on about what they will experience in treatment. Help them understand what the process of change is and give them a model of what they will go through so they will not be surprised. Teach them that their recovery difficulties can be predicted, so they won't get discouraged or feel guilty about inevitable struggles, mistakes, and bumps in the treatment process.

Teach the concept of teamwork for recovery: One of the most important aspects of treatment is having a team approach that includes medical, dietary, psychological, and spiritual considerations. Family, community, and friends also need to be included in treatment whenever possible. It is also important to help the client expand their circle of support, not only in quantity and breadth, but also in depth. Teach them how to ask for help to replace the hollow and empty promises of an eating disorder.

Facing shame: An important issue to address in the context of therapy is a client's intense feelings of shame, self-hatred, and self-contempt that are often at the very core of the eating disorder. Many with eating disorders feel unacceptable to themselves and to everyone else and they tend to be very rigid in their thoughts and beliefs about themselves. In the context of their self-contempt, they tend to be very self-punishing. To make that mental process explicit and to have it be an ongoing therapeutic discussion is important in the therapy of eating disorders.

Comparing and competing: It is important to address clients' intense tendency to compare to and compete with other people-especially other eating disorder sufferers. Clients all too often compare themselves with others in hopes to feel good, or as self damaging ways to make themselves feel bad. Their competitiveness is part of the same pattern where they say to themselves, "Somebody has something that I don't have," (which is usually eating disorder related) "and that means they are better at the eating disorder than I am." It is important to help them, over the course of time, to address the underlying purpose or function of the comparing and competitive jealousy. Help them begin to challenge that negative purpose.

False guilt and boundaries: Another therapeutic theme for many clients is excessive false guilt in which they feel bad about themselves and experience intense feelings of guilt over things that do not, in fact, belong to them. They feel guilt over the inability to be perfect, or they feel guilt over their powerlessness to change struggling family members. Address the false guilt and help them understand the difference between the feelings of having done something wrong and the feelings of being powerless to fix, change, or make a situation better. Many of those with eating disorders have emotional boundary issues and dilemmas. It is essential to help them address internal and external boundaries and to address responsibility for their own, internal self, and not the internal selves of other people.

Finding middle ground: Black and white thinking, mind reading, and personalization are common cognitive distortions of eating disorders. It is important to establish or adopt a strategy that lies "somewhere in the middle" rather than out on the extreme ends of the spectrum of choice. Any kind of work to help a client see an alternative "middle of the road" perception, strategy, or emotion is a helpful focus in outpatient therapy.

Telling the truth: Addressing dishonesty, deception, and secrecy is a very important therapeutic issue in the treatment of eating disorders because one of the keys to recovery is for clients to take ownership or responsibility for themselves. It is also in the honest expression of their feelings and thoughts that hope for recovery comes. Sharing what is really going on or what they have really done, with honesty, directness, and clarity rather than keeping it vague, hidden, and secret, is a major change for them. For many clients, giving up their secrecy is the point when things start to improve for them.

One message at a time: Direct communication that does not include multiple messages is a very important therapeutic theme and intervention in outpatient therapy. Clients often communicate very indirectly and sometimes send double messages about what they are trying to express. Helping them to communicate specifically, directly, with only one message at a time, even if it is to themselves, is a very helpful ongoing intervention. It is important to have the client look at the double messages they give in their communications. They often say they want to get well yet they seem to act in favor of the illness. Oftentimes they say things they do not mean since they are often in an image-based role of pleasing other people and therefore are frequently dishonest with themselves and others. Honest communication can open the door to change.

Explore painful childhood decisions: Addressing family issues with the client from the perspective of a child and demonstrating how, as a little girl, she may have interpreted things, made decisions, or arrived at emotional conclusions based upon some of those interactions, can be a very healing and important part of therapy. Through this exercise clients begin to see that some of the beliefs, feelings, and strategies of their childhood have continued on into their adulthood and now perpetuate the eating disorder. They need to see that the eating disorder is an expression of those early emotional and often painful decisions or conclusions.

Separations: Addressing the separation between who clients are and their eating disorder is an important step in the recovery process. If the client can begin to see the eating disorder as separate from themselves and not as part of their identity, then they can begin to empower themselves to change the eating disorder pattern without the risk of losing themselves. It is also important in terms of helping them correct, let go of, or amend the eating disorder consequences that have impacted them and others for many years.

Taking risks: Because eating disorders are so fear and avoidance-based, it is important, at the appropriate time in recovery, to put a great deal of emphasis on risk-taking in which the client faces fears, challenges themselves to do things differently, and steps out of their comfort zone and rigidity. This risk taking can be on an emotional, behavioral, communication, or relationship level. Having an ongoing emphasis on taking risks and facing fears is very helpful whether they succeed or struggle. Avoidance often maintains low self esteem and therefore, facing fears is imperative to recovery.

Inpatient Structure
The complexity of eating disorders and their associated issues should be apparent from this article. Treating eating disorders in an outpatient setting can yield success, but it takes a dedicated, multi-disciplinary approach and may take longer than some may hope for. Severe eating disorder illness may need to be treated in a controlled and structured inpatient facility where the rigid cycles of self-hate and self destruction can be supervised and addressed around the clock. Outpatient therapy can then again be used to support and aid the client's ongoing recovery from the eating disorder through aftercare which is so important.


Increasing Structure in Outpatient Treatment of Anorexia Nervosa and Bulimia






Tuesday, April 16, 2013

Anorexia Nervosa Mortality Rates In Adolescents

Anorexia Nervosa Mortality Rates In Adolescents


ItemTitle

Eating disorders like anorexia nervosa have the highest mortality rate of any mental disorder. More than 8 million people is America have an eating disorder, one million of them are men.

Anorexia Nervosa Mortality Rates In Adolescents

Anorexic Diet

the accuracy about online anorexia allotment 1





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the accuracy about online anorexia allotment 1



THE TRUTH ABOUT ONLINE ANOREXIA U.S. PREMIERE British TV and radio personality, Fearne Cotton, examines the ongoing trend for super-slim women and immerses h...

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Anorexia and Bulimia - the Most Common Eating Disorders


ItemTitle

Eating disorders are a common problem of the modern society. Mostly women are affected by eating disorders but a number of men are also suffering from them.

Anorexia and Bulimia - the Most Common Eating Disorders

Anorexic Diet

the accuracy about online anorexia allotment 1





Click Here FLV MPlayer - Free Download

Video Clips. Duration : 9.88 Mins.



the accuracy about online anorexia allotment 1



THE TRUTH ABOUT ONLINE ANOREXIA U.S. PREMIERE British TV and radio personality, Fearne Cotton, examines the ongoing trend for super-slim women and immerses h...

the accuracy about online anorexia allotment 1

the accuracy about online anorexia allotment 1


the accuracy about online anorexia allotment 1

the accuracy about online anorexia allotment 1

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What Are the Effects of Anorexia?


ItemTitle

Anorexia is such a terrible disease, and the effects of it are devastating, to both the victim and to the people that love them. When the disease reaches it worst levels, it can actually lead to a gruesome death.

What Are the Effects of Anorexia?

Anorexic Diet

the accuracy about online anorexia allotment 1





Click Here FLV MPlayer - Free Download

Video Clips. Duration : 9.88 Mins.



the accuracy about online anorexia allotment 1



THE TRUTH ABOUT ONLINE ANOREXIA U.S. PREMIERE British TV and radio personality, Fearne Cotton, examines the ongoing trend for super-slim women and immerses h...

the accuracy about online anorexia allotment 1

the accuracy about online anorexia allotment 1


the accuracy about online anorexia allotment 1

the accuracy about online anorexia allotment 1

No URL the accuracy about online anorexia allotment 1

Anorexia and Bulimia - the Most Common Eating Disorders


ItemTitle

Eating disorders are a common problem of the modern society. Mostly women are affected by eating disorders but a number of men are also suffering from them.

Anorexia and Bulimia - the Most Common Eating Disorders

Anorexic Diet

the accuracy about online anorexia allotment 1





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THE TRUTH ABOUT ONLINE ANOREXIA U.S. PREMIERE British TV and radio personality, Fearne Cotton, examines the ongoing trend for super-slim women and immerses h...

the accuracy about online anorexia allotment 1

the accuracy about online anorexia allotment 1


the accuracy about online anorexia allotment 1

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THE TRUTH ABOUT ONLINE ANOREXIA U.S. PREMIERE British TV and radio personality, Fearne Cotton, examines the ongoing trend for super-slim women and immerses h...




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Having an eating disorder is much more than being on a strict diet, carefully counting the calories and exercising daily to lose weight. An eating disorder is an illness that seriously affects the patient's life and the lives of his family members.
Those with eating disorders are trying to control their emotions and their lives through eating or through not eating, depending on each person with an eating disorder.


Anorexic Diet

Anorexia and Bulimia - the Most Common Eating Disorders



The two main eating disorders are anorexia and bulimia. Both illnesses make their victims obsessed with the fact that they must do everything in their powers to not become fat. They feel that as long as they are thin they are in control of their actions and lives.



Anorexia and Bulimia - the Most Common Eating Disorders

Those with bulimia eat a large amount of food in a short time and then they make themselves throw up or they take a large amount of laxatives so they eliminate all the food they've eaten as fast as possible.
Bulimia patients do a lot of physical exercises and they eat very little, until they can't stand the hunger and they eat as much as they can. When they realize the they have eaten a lot of food they immediately take action to eliminate it.

The causes of bulimia are psychological, and they are related to stress, culture or the family.

The symptoms of bulimia are:

-the patient takes extreme measures to lose a lot of weight, exercises all the time even if he/she is injured or very tired

-throws up or takes pills to urinate often or laxatives

If bulimia is not discovered and treated by a specialized doctor it can gravely endanger the health condition of the patient. It can cause depression, anxiety, cavities, fatigue, weakness, ulcer, low blood pressure and many more.

Those with anorexia are obsessed with losing weight and they have a distorted image of their own bodies too. Even if they are as thin as a stick they will still think that they are fat.
They talk about diets and exercising all the time and they do not eat at all. If you offer them food they will refuse. They can even die of starvation eventually if they continue to refuse to eat for a long time.

As in bulimia's case, anorexics talk all the time about losing weight and they always exercise and keep a strict diet.

Anorexia can also lead to serious health issues like low blood pressure, weakened bones and defense system, kidney stones, depression, loss of period in women and loss of potency in men, and many more.

Those with anorexia or bulimia must be helped as soon as possible before they seriously harm themselves. They will deny that they have a problem, so talking with them won't help. They must be helped by specialized doctors.


Anorexia and Bulimia - the Most Common Eating Disorders









THE TRUTH ABOUT ONLINE ANOREXIA U.S. PREMIERE British TV and radio personality, Fearne Cotton, examines the ongoing trend for super-slim women and immerses h...




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Many people think that anorexia is basically a harmless thing; that a young girl just wants to be thin, but it is actually much more than that. If all it were was an alternative diet style or method, it might not be so bad, but basically, anorexia is the process of starving yourself to death. And the effects of the disease as the person is starving can be quite painful to endure.


Anorexic Diet

What Are the Effects of Anorexia?



Typically, the person suffering from anorexia is a young girl who has low self esteem. They have an unrealistic image of themselves and are trying to become something they believe is beautiful. One sad effect of anorexia is the person suffering tends to believe they are fat, when in reality they are grossly underweight.



What Are the Effects of Anorexia?

Because the anorexic is starving themselves, they tend to have numerous health issues, such as low blood pressure, brittle nails, and irregular heart rhythm. Because many anorexics also refuse to drink enough water, they can also experience kidney failure.

Other effects of anorexia include changes in their personality, fixation on food, lying about the food they have eaten, and hiding the food and disposing of it later. Some anorexics also suffer from bulimia, which is where they gorge themselves on food and then regurgitate it later.

Because their relatives worry about their health, many anorexia victims will engage in excessive exercise, showing they have tremendous energy and the weight loss is just the natural result of all that exercise.

Not everyone who suffers with anorexia has the same symptoms, because all people are different. One of the first things to look for is having a body weight that is not consistent with their age and height. Another effect on their body will be an irregular menstrual cycle. The anorexic often declines to eat in public or with other people, sometimes saying they just ate, they aren't hungry, etc.

Other effects include psychological problems like anxiety, weakness, dry skin, and shortness of breath. Anorexics also tend to suffer from bone loss due to low food intake. This leads to stunted growth and development of osteoporosis. So the long term effects of anorexia last a lifetime.

One of the worst effects of anorexia includes death. As many as 15% of the people suffering from this disease actually die as a direct result of it, either by heart failure, kidney failure, or other organ failure. Many anorexics even commit suicide as a result of the conflicting emotional problems they suffer from.

The easiest way to treat this disease is to detect it early. It is much easier to prevent the disease from the onset, than it is to try and cure the effects of it after it has taken grip on the victim.


What Are the Effects of Anorexia?









THE TRUTH ABOUT ONLINE ANOREXIA U.S. PREMIERE British TV and radio personality, Fearne Cotton, examines the ongoing trend for super-slim women and immerses h...




Tags:


Having an eating disorder is much more than being on a strict diet, carefully counting the calories and exercising daily to lose weight. An eating disorder is an illness that seriously affects the patient's life and the lives of his family members.
Those with eating disorders are trying to control their emotions and their lives through eating or through not eating, depending on each person with an eating disorder.


Anorexic Diet

Anorexia and Bulimia - the Most Common Eating Disorders



The two main eating disorders are anorexia and bulimia. Both illnesses make their victims obsessed with the fact that they must do everything in their powers to not become fat. They feel that as long as they are thin they are in control of their actions and lives.



Anorexia and Bulimia - the Most Common Eating Disorders

Those with bulimia eat a large amount of food in a short time and then they make themselves throw up or they take a large amount of laxatives so they eliminate all the food they've eaten as fast as possible.
Bulimia patients do a lot of physical exercises and they eat very little, until they can't stand the hunger and they eat as much as they can. When they realize the they have eaten a lot of food they immediately take action to eliminate it.

The causes of bulimia are psychological, and they are related to stress, culture or the family.

The symptoms of bulimia are:

-the patient takes extreme measures to lose a lot of weight, exercises all the time even if he/she is injured or very tired

-throws up or takes pills to urinate often or laxatives

If bulimia is not discovered and treated by a specialized doctor it can gravely endanger the health condition of the patient. It can cause depression, anxiety, cavities, fatigue, weakness, ulcer, low blood pressure and many more.

Those with anorexia are obsessed with losing weight and they have a distorted image of their own bodies too. Even if they are as thin as a stick they will still think that they are fat.
They talk about diets and exercising all the time and they do not eat at all. If you offer them food they will refuse. They can even die of starvation eventually if they continue to refuse to eat for a long time.

As in bulimia's case, anorexics talk all the time about losing weight and they always exercise and keep a strict diet.

Anorexia can also lead to serious health issues like low blood pressure, weakened bones and defense system, kidney stones, depression, loss of period in women and loss of potency in men, and many more.

Those with anorexia or bulimia must be helped as soon as possible before they seriously harm themselves. They will deny that they have a problem, so talking with them won't help. They must be helped by specialized doctors.


Anorexia and Bulimia - the Most Common Eating Disorders









THE TRUTH ABOUT ONLINE ANOREXIA U.S. PREMIERE British TV and radio personality, Fearne Cotton, examines the ongoing trend for super-slim women and immerses h...




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Anorexia is a mental illness that has grown a lot in recent years and is affecting millions of teenagers and adults, there are many more that have eating disorders but do not seek help for shame or because they dont want to recover.


Anorexic Diet

Anorexia Nervosa Mortality Rates In Adolescents



The National Association of Anorexia Nervosa, reported that 5% to 10% of all the people with this illness have died in a period of 10 years after they acquired the disorder. Also up to 20% of anorexics will be dead after twenty years old. Just 30 to 40 percent recover from this disorder.



Anorexia Nervosa Mortality Rates In Adolescents

There are many complications and side effects that a person with anorexia nervosa acquire, 20% of them will diet due to these complications, sometimes due to heart problems or even suicide.

The statistics are shocking and they are worst that what we know because many of the people with eating disorders including men avoid talking about it or getting help, there many who see this disorder as a lifestyle.

For example there are forums and sites on the internet that are pro anorexia, they help them with their lifestyle and give them tips of how to hide their disorder or how to follow their diet. Anorexia is not a lifestyle is a serious illness that needs physical and emotional attention.

As you can see, anorexia is a deadly illness, the anorexia nervosa mortality rates in adolescents are the highest of any other mental illness, we need to educate our children and students at school of the dangers of this disorders and how to find help.


Anorexia Nervosa Mortality Rates In Adolescents






Tuesday, April 2, 2013

Anorexia Nervosa - Signs and Symptoms

Anorexia Nervosa - Signs and Symptoms


ItemTitle

Anorexia Nervosa or anorexia cases are increasing with more and more people acquiring eating disorders. This disorder is very common in young adults, especially young women. People suffering from Anorexia can seem unaware of the dyer consequences of the disorder. In fact, most sufferers are aware that they are hurting their body. They do not care about the consequences, as the disorder seems to be the only escape from their present emotional pain.

Anorexia Nervosa - Signs and Symptoms

Anorexic Diet

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Eating Disorder - Bulimia Versus Anorexia


ItemTitle

There are several similarities and differences between Anorexia and Bulimia.

Eating Disorder - Bulimia Versus Anorexia

Anorexic Diet

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Anorexia Symptoms Include Bone Fractures and Osteoporosis - Calcium Supplements Are Essential


ItemTitle

Anorexia symptoms include bone fractures, low bone density and osteoporosis. The condition is typically identified during mid to late adolescence--which is a critical period for bone development. Anorexia is an eating disorder characterized by an irrational fear of weight gain and severe restriction of diet and nutrition. While the majority of people with anorexia are female, an estimated 5 to 15 percent of people with anorexia are male.

Anorexia Symptoms Include Bone Fractures and Osteoporosis - Calcium Supplements Are Essential

Anorexic Diet

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High Protein Diets For Anorexia Nervosa Patients


ItemTitle

Studies show that one percent of all teenage girls and young women in their 20s will develop anorexia nervosa, and that 10 to 15% of those girls will die due to complications from this condition. Some men develop this condition as well, usually teenage boys.

High Protein Diets For Anorexia Nervosa Patients

Anorexic Diet

Pro Anorexia Diet Review, Week 1 Day 1





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Anorexia Nervosa - Signs and Symptoms


ItemTitle

Anorexia Nervosa or anorexia cases are increasing with more and more people acquiring eating disorders. This disorder is very common in young adults, especially young women. People suffering from Anorexia can seem unaware of the dyer consequences of the disorder. In fact, most sufferers are aware that they are hurting their body. They do not care about the consequences, as the disorder seems to be the only escape from their present emotional pain.

Anorexia Nervosa - Signs and Symptoms

Anorexic Diet

Pro Anorexia Diet Review, Week 1 Day 1





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What Are the Effects of Anorexia?


ItemTitle

Anorexia is such a terrible disease, and the effects of it are devastating, to both the victim and to the people that love them. When the disease reaches it worst levels, it can actually lead to a gruesome death.

What Are the Effects of Anorexia?

Anorexic Diet

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What Are the Effects of Anorexia?


ItemTitle

Anorexia is such a terrible disease, and the effects of it are devastating, to both the victim and to the people that love them. When the disease reaches it worst levels, it can actually lead to a gruesome death.

What Are the Effects of Anorexia?

Anorexic Diet

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Anorexia Nervosa - Information on What It Is, Who Gets Affected, and Its Origin


ItemTitle

Anorexia nervosa is a "psychiatric eating disorder" where people starve themselves. It is usually composed of a fear of gaining weight and an obsession about thinness. Even when anorexics have lost immense amount of weight, they are never convinced to the fact that they are underweight and they continue dieting, taking laxatives, purging and not eating. What they overlook is the immense torture they put upon themselves both physically and mentally.

Anorexia Nervosa - Information on What It Is, Who Gets Affected, and Its Origin

Anorexic Diet

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Eating Disorder - Bulimia Versus Anorexia


ItemTitle

There are several similarities and differences between Anorexia and Bulimia.

Eating Disorder - Bulimia Versus Anorexia

Anorexic Diet

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Anorexic Diet

Eating Disorder - Bulimia Versus Anorexia



. Both Anorexia and Bulimia usually start in people after a time of dieting. These individuals generally go on a diet as they are obsessed with the fact of having perfect bodies, or are afraid of becoming obese, or have problems with anxiety, stress or even depression, or being a perfectionist. Therefore, sufferers of both eating disorders are obsessed with weight, appearance and food.



Eating Disorder - Bulimia Versus Anorexia

. Both anorexia and bulimia affect the internal organs.

. They are both life threatening eating disorders.

. Both bulimics and anorexics, regardless of how they look, they always are under the impression that they are overweight.

. Depression, fatigue and heart failure are three conditions suffered by both bulimics and anorexics.

. Excessive exercising in both.

Differences:

. Anorexics and Bulimics are both concerned about the opinions of other people, however bulimics tend to be more worried about being appealing to others and about pleasing others and having close relationships with people. As a result, they tend to be more active and sexually more experienced.

. Bulimics eat large quantities of food and then vomit or take laxatives and exercise to avoid gaining weight, whereas anorexics starve, exercise constantly and avoid food with high calories to avoid gaining weight.

. Anorexics have more obsessions or obsessive qualities than bulimics that compel them to control their calorific intake so strictly.

. In bulimics, history of mood swings are longer, controlling their impulses is difficult, they get frustrated or bored easily when compared with anorexics.

. Anorexics lose more weight than bulimics.

. Almost one hundred percent of women with anorexia suffer from a condition call Amenorrhea in which there is an absence of menstruation, whereas it is only fifty percent in women who suffer from bulimia.

. Anorexia occurs mainly in adolescent girls. However, the numbers of boys who suffer from it are on the increase. Bulimia occurs mainly in women from the age of 20 - 25 years of age.

. Medical problems that arise from bulimia are constipation, pain in stomach, sometimes the esophagus may rupture due to frequency of vomiting, as a result of frequent vomiting the acid causes tooth decay. Medical problems that arise from anorexia are anemia, low blood pressure, dehydration, reduced bone density, kidney failure and muscle loss.

. Bulimics feel they are not in control of their behavior therefore they are more likely to admit their problem whereas anorexics feel they are in control of their behavior and are therefore less likely to admit their problem.

. The various signs and symptoms of bulimia are discolored teeth, puffy face, fingers are swollen, visit to the toilet after ever meal to purge. The various signs and symptoms of anorexia are wearing baggy clothes to hide weight loss, scanty hair and dry skin, moody, feels cold no matter what the weather may be, dizziness, avoids food, weighs food, counts calories, growth of fine hair on some parts of the body, takes diet pills.

. Treatment of bulimia is generally to get rid of the habit of binging and purging whereas the treatment of anorexia takes place in three stages that is to restore the weight lost, treat the underlying emotional problems such as depression, low self-esteem and achieve long-term recovery.


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Anorexia Statistics


Anorexic Diet

Anorexia Nervosa - Information on What It Is, Who Gets Affected, and Its Origin



Among the people who get affected, 90% of them are female, while most are adolescent females. Statistics show that 1-5% of all adolescents and young women are diagnosed with it. This disorder is rare among children below 10 years old and women above 40 years old. It is more prevalent in western society than it is in non-western society, probably due to the idealization of thinness in the western culture.



Anorexia Nervosa - Information on What It Is, Who Gets Affected, and Its Origin

This is not just an eating disorder, but a complex condition involving neurobiological, psychological, and sociological components; in worst case scenarios, all these can sum up to cause death too. Approximately 10% diagnosed with the disorder eventually die due to causes related to morality rate of the disorder. Among other psychiatric eating disorders, this particular disorder has claimed the highest number of deaths.

Origin of the term "anorexia nervosa"

The term "anorexia" is of Greek origin, which simply means lack of desire to eat. Nervosa on the other hand contributes to the nervous psychological characteristics of the eating disorder. The actually meaning of the word does not however perfectly resemble the disorder, people suffering from it do not necessarily have a loss of appetite; they are rather scared of gaining weight. Anorexia nervosa is often shortened to anorexia. Technically, this is incorrect, as "anorexia" itself means lack of desire to eat, and has a different meaning altogether; however, in this website the term "anorexia" will be used to define "anorexia nervosa" as a whole.

How is excessive dieting so dangerous?

Lets leave the psychological torture of anorexia apart; what makes excessive dieting so dangerous?

Anorexics do not go for a "general" routine diet. Instead, they restrict their calories grossly or literally stop eating. You might be guessing this is an easy way to lose fat quickly; if you are, you are wrong.

If the human body is suddenly deprived of sufficient nutrients, the immediate effect falls on the muscles, not fat. This means, if someone suddenly stops having lunch and dinner regularly, the person will lose his/her muscles before the person loses his/her fat. Losing muscles indirectly means losing energy, strength and a lot of other complications.


Anorexia Nervosa - Information on What It Is, Who Gets Affected, and Its Origin









A girl that is too fat decides to go on a journey to loose weight....watch what happens to me mentally emotionaly and physically.... 15/01/2012 This is a Rev...




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Many people think that anorexia is basically a harmless thing; that a young girl just wants to be thin, but it is actually much more than that. If all it were was an alternative diet style or method, it might not be so bad, but basically, anorexia is the process of starving yourself to death. And the effects of the disease as the person is starving can be quite painful to endure.


Anorexic Diet

What Are the Effects of Anorexia?



Typically, the person suffering from anorexia is a young girl who has low self esteem. They have an unrealistic image of themselves and are trying to become something they believe is beautiful. One sad effect of anorexia is the person suffering tends to believe they are fat, when in reality they are grossly underweight.



What Are the Effects of Anorexia?

Because the anorexic is starving themselves, they tend to have numerous health issues, such as low blood pressure, brittle nails, and irregular heart rhythm. Because many anorexics also refuse to drink enough water, they can also experience kidney failure.

Other effects of anorexia include changes in their personality, fixation on food, lying about the food they have eaten, and hiding the food and disposing of it later. Some anorexics also suffer from bulimia, which is where they gorge themselves on food and then regurgitate it later.

Because their relatives worry about their health, many anorexia victims will engage in excessive exercise, showing they have tremendous energy and the weight loss is just the natural result of all that exercise.

Not everyone who suffers with anorexia has the same symptoms, because all people are different. One of the first things to look for is having a body weight that is not consistent with their age and height. Another effect on their body will be an irregular menstrual cycle. The anorexic often declines to eat in public or with other people, sometimes saying they just ate, they aren't hungry, etc.

Other effects include psychological problems like anxiety, weakness, dry skin, and shortness of breath. Anorexics also tend to suffer from bone loss due to low food intake. This leads to stunted growth and development of osteoporosis. So the long term effects of anorexia last a lifetime.

One of the worst effects of anorexia includes death. As many as 15% of the people suffering from this disease actually die as a direct result of it, either by heart failure, kidney failure, or other organ failure. Many anorexics even commit suicide as a result of the conflicting emotional problems they suffer from.

The easiest way to treat this disease is to detect it early. It is much easier to prevent the disease from the onset, than it is to try and cure the effects of it after it has taken grip on the victim.


What Are the Effects of Anorexia?









A girl that is too fat decides to go on a journey to loose weight....watch what happens to me mentally emotionaly and physically.... 15/01/2012 This is a Rev...




Keywords:


Many people think that anorexia is basically a harmless thing; that a young girl just wants to be thin, but it is actually much more than that. If all it were was an alternative diet style or method, it might not be so bad, but basically, anorexia is the process of starving yourself to death. And the effects of the disease as the person is starving can be quite painful to endure.


Anorexic Diet

What Are the Effects of Anorexia?



Typically, the person suffering from anorexia is a young girl who has low self esteem. They have an unrealistic image of themselves and are trying to become something they believe is beautiful. One sad effect of anorexia is the person suffering tends to believe they are fat, when in reality they are grossly underweight.



What Are the Effects of Anorexia?

Because the anorexic is starving themselves, they tend to have numerous health issues, such as low blood pressure, brittle nails, and irregular heart rhythm. Because many anorexics also refuse to drink enough water, they can also experience kidney failure.

Other effects of anorexia include changes in their personality, fixation on food, lying about the food they have eaten, and hiding the food and disposing of it later. Some anorexics also suffer from bulimia, which is where they gorge themselves on food and then regurgitate it later.

Because their relatives worry about their health, many anorexia victims will engage in excessive exercise, showing they have tremendous energy and the weight loss is just the natural result of all that exercise.

Not everyone who suffers with anorexia has the same symptoms, because all people are different. One of the first things to look for is having a body weight that is not consistent with their age and height. Another effect on their body will be an irregular menstrual cycle. The anorexic often declines to eat in public or with other people, sometimes saying they just ate, they aren't hungry, etc.

Other effects include psychological problems like anxiety, weakness, dry skin, and shortness of breath. Anorexics also tend to suffer from bone loss due to low food intake. This leads to stunted growth and development of osteoporosis. So the long term effects of anorexia last a lifetime.

One of the worst effects of anorexia includes death. As many as 15% of the people suffering from this disease actually die as a direct result of it, either by heart failure, kidney failure, or other organ failure. Many anorexics even commit suicide as a result of the conflicting emotional problems they suffer from.

The easiest way to treat this disease is to detect it early. It is much easier to prevent the disease from the onset, than it is to try and cure the effects of it after it has taken grip on the victim.


What Are the Effects of Anorexia?









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Look Out for these Signs and Symptoms


Anorexic Diet

Anorexia Nervosa - Signs and Symptoms



- Restricting caloric intake to less than needed to maintain healthy ideal body weight
- Following a severely limited diet even if underweight
- Forced vomiting or other compensatory behaviors like laxative use, diuretic use or compulsive exercise
- Absence of menstrual cycles for three or more consecutive months
- Fear of eating in social places or in front of others
- Increased isolation and depressive symptoms
- Relentless pursuit of thinness
- Obsessive thinking and talking about weight, shape, size, appearance, or
food.
- Rituals around body checking, exercise, or food.
- Loss of interest in activities and relationships
- Body dissatisfaction, body image distortion.
- Chewing and spitting as an attempt to control weight
- Taking in excessive amounts of fluid or restricting fluid intake
- Use or abuse of diet pills, herbal supplements, or teas.
- Depression and insomnia
- Constipation and bloating



Anorexia Nervosa - Signs and Symptoms

Some physical symptoms associated with anorexia are starvation, fatigue, low body temperature, low heart rate, heart disease, low body metabolism, tooth and gum infections, growth of facial hair, loss of hair from scalp, anemia, dry and dull skin, osteoporosis, impaired kidney functions, and puffiness in the face.

Ensure Treatment at Reliable Treatment Centers

Anorexia Nervosa requires immediate treatment as it can be life threatening. The diagnosis may be difficult due to the shame, secrecy and denial surrounding the disorder. Treatment by specialists in a specialized treatment center is vital to ensure effectiveness and prevent recurrence and relapse.


Anorexia Nervosa - Signs and Symptoms









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Anorexia nervosa can be treated, and about three quarters of all anorexia patients will find that their conditions will improve through long-term treatment, although only about 40% of patients make a full recovery. With the proper psychological counseling and a healthy diet, patients can regain their weight and go on to live healthy lives. Much like alcoholism and drug addiction, anorexia nervosa is a condition that will stay with patients for life, but they can learn how to control it.


Anorexic Diet

High Protein Diets For Anorexia Nervosa Patients



What is Anorexia Nervosa?



High Protein Diets For Anorexia Nervosa Patients

Anorexia Nervosa is an eating disorder that causes the sufferer to believe that they are overweight, no matter how thin they are. Because of their perceived body image, they do a number of things to control their weight, including heavy dieting and exercising, to the point of often being grossly underweight. In fact, most Anorexia Nervosa patients are underweight by at least 15%.

There are various symptoms of Anorexia Nervosa, including excessive diet and exercise, heavy use of laxatives and binging and purging (also known as bulimia), and if not treated, these symptoms can often lead to a host of serious health conditions and, eventually, death. Many Anorexia Nervosa patients can be treated on an out-patient basis, but there are also many patients who need in-patient care because their condition has gotten to the point where they need to be hospitalized.

Facts about Anorexia Nervosa

If you notice that a friend or family member seems to be losing an excessive amount of weight, exercises far too frequently and doesn't seem to be eating much, there may be cause for concern, as these are all signs that this person may be an anorexic and needs to seek treatment. Here are some more facts about Anorexia Nervosa:

- Low blood pressure and an abnormal heart rate are symptoms of Anorexia Nervosa, and some sufferers have been known to develop heart conditions and even have heart attacks.

- Anorexics tend to have more cavities and their tooth enamel erodes. This is especially visible in bulimics because of the stomach acid that is brought up during regurgitation.

- Anorexia Nervosa sufferers often experience kidney troubles and even kidney failure.

- Anorexia Nervosa can result in osteoarthritis and other health conditions.

- Female anorexics may experience irregular periods, or even no periods at all.

Protein Supplements as Part of an Anorexia Nervosa Treatment Plan

One of the ways that a patient can get back on the right track to good health is through a healthy, well-balanced diet, which includes plenty of protein. In the beginning of the patient's treatment, one of the most difficult hurdles to get past will be getting him or her to eat. This is where liquid protein supplements can come into play and are often recommended by physicians. Yes, the patient still has to deal with the idea of putting calories into their bodies, but they are drinking those calories. It may seem like the same thing, but the act of drinking instead of eating has a psychological effect.

Protein supplements come in a number of forms, and can be purchased as ready-to-drink beverages or added to homemade shakes, smoothies and slushies. These are tasty drinks that patients can use to help gain weight, build and repair muscles and improve their condition, thereby improving their health in general. There are also protein bars and snacks as well as protein capsules.

Liquid Protein Supplements for High Protein/Calorie/Carb/Fat Diets

Protein supplements are often used in the treatment of many illnesses and other health issues, and when patients have difficulties eating solid food or, like anorexics, do not want to eat solid food, liquid protein supplements are perfect meal replacements.

There are a number of ready-made liquid protein supplement beverages available on the market today, and you can find them in health food stores, along with many pharmacies, department stores and supermarkets. These supplements come in a variety of delicious flavors, including chocolate and vanilla, and provide the protein that patients need, as well as a number of essential vitamins and nutrients.

Many liquid supplements are made from whey, which is a milk derivative and comes from the cheese-making process. Whey protein is considered to be a complete protein, because it contains all eight essential and all 14 non-essential amino-acids. People who are allergic to milk products or who are lactose intolerant should read the ingredients carefully to avoid liquid protein supplements that are made with whey. Other options that they can use include soy, another complete protein, and rice, which is also hypoallergenic. Both soy and rice proteins are also great options for vegetarians.

Using Powdered Protein Supplements for Weight Gain

Powdered protein supplements are another great choice for weight-gain diets. If the patient will eat some solid foods, unflavored protein powders can be added to a number of recipes for added protein and other nutrients. Or if the patient is not ready to begin eating solid foods, there are loads of delicious shakes, smoothies and slushies that can be made at home, which incorporate protein powders and other delicious ingredients such as berries, yogurt, milk and fruit juice that are packed with protein and loaded with vitamins and minerals.

Protein Capsules for Severe Cases

There are many cases where patients have extreme difficulties overcoming the effects of Anorexia Nervosa, especially the psychological ones. These patients, no matter how sick they are, still refuse to eat. Before drastic steps have to be taken and the patients are put on intravenous, there is one more option when it comes to protein supplements. Protein capsules have no fat or calories for the patient to be concerned with, and they can be taken with water, which also has no fat, calories or carbohydrates. This way, even if they are not getting food, they are at least getting protein.


High Protein Diets For Anorexia Nervosa Patients









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Anorexia is typically identified during mid to late adolescence, which is a critical period for bone development. Up to one third of peak bone density is achieved during puberty. This is the time when we fill up our bone banks- from which we will make withdrawals later in life. The degree of bone loss seen with anorexia is unique in its severity and anorexia symptoms of bone loss can be detected after only 6 months of illness. Compression fractures and spinal deformity are not uncommon amongst very young patients.


Anorexic Diet

Anorexia Symptoms Include Bone Fractures and Osteoporosis - Calcium Supplements Are Essential



A bone mineral density (BMD) test can detect bone loss before a fracture occurs and indicate the risk of future fractures. However, some studies indicate that changes in bone structure begin well before decreases in bone density reveal themselves through a DXA test. A flat-panel volume CT allows the bones to be examined at higher resolution (with relatively low radiation) for more accurate results.



Anorexia Symptoms Include Bone Fractures and Osteoporosis - Calcium Supplements Are Essential

DIET AND SUPPLEMENTS

While a healthy diet is the best way to maintain healthy bones, it is also the most compromised during anorexia. Calcium and vitamin supplements that include vitamin D, vitamin K and magnesium often prove to be an acceptable alternative because they provide nutrition without causing any weight gain. If a person is eating irregularly or purging during the day, taking a single serving of a comprehensive supplement such as Greens+ Bone Builder may provide an optimal solution until recovery is achieved. Taking the supplement before going to bed will take maximum advantage of the bone renewal that occurs overnight.

EXERCISE

Anorexia is often accompanied by compulsive exercising aimed at burning calories and punishing oneself for eating something "bad". Weight-bearing exercises are important for bone health but people with anorexia must also consider the risk of fractures. Low impact weight training can help to strengthen the bones if done in moderation rather than as punishment.

ESTROGEN THERAPY

Low body weight can cause women to stop producing estrogen and men to stop producing the testosterone needed for healthy bone development. However, the effectiveness of estrogen replacement therapy in treating anorexia is still unclear. Some studies found that estrogen/progestin replacement and calcium supplementation did not prevent or reverse bone loss, while others found that it prevented bone loss but did not increase bone density. Research is on-going and the appropriateness of the treatment should be discussed with your doctor.


Anorexia Symptoms Include Bone Fractures and Osteoporosis - Calcium Supplements Are Essential









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Similarities:


Anorexic Diet

Eating Disorder - Bulimia Versus Anorexia



. Both Anorexia and Bulimia usually start in people after a time of dieting. These individuals generally go on a diet as they are obsessed with the fact of having perfect bodies, or are afraid of becoming obese, or have problems with anxiety, stress or even depression, or being a perfectionist. Therefore, sufferers of both eating disorders are obsessed with weight, appearance and food.



Eating Disorder - Bulimia Versus Anorexia

. Both anorexia and bulimia affect the internal organs.

. They are both life threatening eating disorders.

. Both bulimics and anorexics, regardless of how they look, they always are under the impression that they are overweight.

. Depression, fatigue and heart failure are three conditions suffered by both bulimics and anorexics.

. Excessive exercising in both.

Differences:

. Anorexics and Bulimics are both concerned about the opinions of other people, however bulimics tend to be more worried about being appealing to others and about pleasing others and having close relationships with people. As a result, they tend to be more active and sexually more experienced.

. Bulimics eat large quantities of food and then vomit or take laxatives and exercise to avoid gaining weight, whereas anorexics starve, exercise constantly and avoid food with high calories to avoid gaining weight.

. Anorexics have more obsessions or obsessive qualities than bulimics that compel them to control their calorific intake so strictly.

. In bulimics, history of mood swings are longer, controlling their impulses is difficult, they get frustrated or bored easily when compared with anorexics.

. Anorexics lose more weight than bulimics.

. Almost one hundred percent of women with anorexia suffer from a condition call Amenorrhea in which there is an absence of menstruation, whereas it is only fifty percent in women who suffer from bulimia.

. Anorexia occurs mainly in adolescent girls. However, the numbers of boys who suffer from it are on the increase. Bulimia occurs mainly in women from the age of 20 - 25 years of age.

. Medical problems that arise from bulimia are constipation, pain in stomach, sometimes the esophagus may rupture due to frequency of vomiting, as a result of frequent vomiting the acid causes tooth decay. Medical problems that arise from anorexia are anemia, low blood pressure, dehydration, reduced bone density, kidney failure and muscle loss.

. Bulimics feel they are not in control of their behavior therefore they are more likely to admit their problem whereas anorexics feel they are in control of their behavior and are therefore less likely to admit their problem.

. The various signs and symptoms of bulimia are discolored teeth, puffy face, fingers are swollen, visit to the toilet after ever meal to purge. The various signs and symptoms of anorexia are wearing baggy clothes to hide weight loss, scanty hair and dry skin, moody, feels cold no matter what the weather may be, dizziness, avoids food, weighs food, counts calories, growth of fine hair on some parts of the body, takes diet pills.

. Treatment of bulimia is generally to get rid of the habit of binging and purging whereas the treatment of anorexia takes place in three stages that is to restore the weight lost, treat the underlying emotional problems such as depression, low self-esteem and achieve long-term recovery.


Eating Disorder - Bulimia Versus Anorexia









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Look Out for these Signs and Symptoms


Anorexic Diet

Anorexia Nervosa - Signs and Symptoms



- Restricting caloric intake to less than needed to maintain healthy ideal body weight
- Following a severely limited diet even if underweight
- Forced vomiting or other compensatory behaviors like laxative use, diuretic use or compulsive exercise
- Absence of menstrual cycles for three or more consecutive months
- Fear of eating in social places or in front of others
- Increased isolation and depressive symptoms
- Relentless pursuit of thinness
- Obsessive thinking and talking about weight, shape, size, appearance, or
food.
- Rituals around body checking, exercise, or food.
- Loss of interest in activities and relationships
- Body dissatisfaction, body image distortion.
- Chewing and spitting as an attempt to control weight
- Taking in excessive amounts of fluid or restricting fluid intake
- Use or abuse of diet pills, herbal supplements, or teas.
- Depression and insomnia
- Constipation and bloating



Anorexia Nervosa - Signs and Symptoms

Some physical symptoms associated with anorexia are starvation, fatigue, low body temperature, low heart rate, heart disease, low body metabolism, tooth and gum infections, growth of facial hair, loss of hair from scalp, anemia, dry and dull skin, osteoporosis, impaired kidney functions, and puffiness in the face.

Ensure Treatment at Reliable Treatment Centers

Anorexia Nervosa requires immediate treatment as it can be life threatening. The diagnosis may be difficult due to the shame, secrecy and denial surrounding the disorder. Treatment by specialists in a specialized treatment center is vital to ensure effectiveness and prevent recurrence and relapse.


Anorexia Nervosa - Signs and Symptoms