РефератыИностранный языкEaEating Disorders Essay Research Paper Eating DisordersNicole

Eating Disorders Essay Research Paper Eating DisordersNicole

Eating Disorders Essay, Research Paper


Eating Disorders


Nicole awakes in her cold, dark room and already wishes it was time to go


back to bed. She dreads the thought of going through this day, which will be


like so many others in her recent past. She asks herself the question every


morning: ?Will I be able to make it through the day without being totally


obsessed by thoughts of food, or will I blow it again and spend the day


bingeing?? She tells herself that today she will begin a new life, today she


will start to live like a normal human being. However, she is not at all


convinced that the choice is hers.


Nicole is one of the thousands of women who suffer from an eating disorder.


These disorders can be compulsive over-eating, bingeing and purging, or


starvation. The most commonly recognized eating disorders in today?s society


are Anorexia and Bulimia Nervosa. ?They are characterized as psychological


disorders, not just physical abnormalities.?(White 77) A short basic


definition of anorexia would describe it as: ?A rare disorder characterized by


marked weight loss, an intense fear of gaining weight, and disturbance in the


experience of body shape.?(Nadelson 21) However, actually suffering through


the disease is much more complicated.


Often, anorexia begins with a period of dieting. The anorexic then begins to


feel unable or unwilling to stop dieting despite dangerous weight loss. ?The


results of anorexia nervosa are often terrible to witness.?(Franklin 12) Some


of the signs are obvious to everyone; others can be concealed by the anorexic.


The physical consequences of anorexia can be anything from drying of skin to


altering physical structures of the brain. If untreated, anorexia nervosa can


lead to one final, tragic result: death.(Deitel C5)


Commonly referred to as, ?The other eating disorder,? bulimia nervosa is


much ?newer? than anorexia?-at least in terms of being recognized as a


distinct medical disorder. ?Bulimia causes individuals to exhibit recurrent


episodes of binge eating, engage in inappropriate behavior to avoid weight gain,


for example self-induced vomiting, and are overly concerned with their shape and


weight.?(Sun-Sentinel 1A) Unlike anorexics, bulimics can keep their weight at


or near the normal level for their height and age. Anorexics, because of their


distorted ideas concerning, ?ideal weight,? cannot. Bulimics lack the


discipline of anorexics. They can diet and exercise as anorexic people do, but


rather than totally sticking to their program, they periodically go to the


opposite extreme, compulsively devouring food.(Hax 93) Then the guilt of their


action leads them to purge, or vomit their food, and cleanse their system.


Although not as often fatal as anorexia, bulimia has many of the same unpleasant


effects on the body and can lead anywhere from physical weakness to heart


failure.(Sun-Sentinel 1A)


It is possible for a person to suffer from both anorexia and bulimia. It is


estimated that approximately half of all anorexics are also bulimic. Bulimia is


common in those who have been battling anorexia for extended periods of


time.(White 64) It is scary to think that anyone you know personally may have an


eating disorder. ______ of students surveyed at Bishop Eustace said that they


have participa

ted in bingeing or purging. _____ percent have starved themselves


to change their weight and personal appearance. There can be many reasons for


these drastic, self-harming actions.(Epstein 40)


Explanation can be difficult, but in studying these diseases, researchers


often look closely at teenagers and preteens and at their family history. Eating


disorders can sometimes run in family health. In Bishop Eustace alone, ____


percent of students surveyed said that they had a relative with an eating


disorder. This percentage can help support the theory that family life should be


studied in cases of eating disorders.


?Lifestyle, upbringing, social environment, and other social factors often


are the largest contributors to why eating disorders are developed among today?s


women.?(Matthews 63) Many young women today blame peer pressure, comments from


coaches, boyfriends, and even parents about weight, and most often, the idea set


by media and the movies that, ?Thin is in.? Stress from various situations


common while growing up can also be a large contributor to eating disorders in


women today.(Epstein 11)


At Bishop Eustace, the surveyed teenagers stated that _____ of them question


their own appearance; they wish they could change something about themselves.


For many of them, it is their weight. This is something that is implanted in


their minds over and over by the media, Hollywood and others they know


personally. _____ of Eustace students said that they were influenced by others


to lose weight.


The eating disorders themselves can be treated with counseling and possibly


hospitalization. The problem that surrounds this fact is that many eating


disorders are not recognized until the disease is already severe.(Deitel C5)


Most girls who suffer from eating disorders are so secretive about their problem


that no one recognizes that they are sick until it is too late. _____ of Eustace


students surveyed said that they would not tell anyone if they had an eating


disorder. This is dangerous because if girls feel that they cannot get help then


they will get even sicker and could die. Communication is a critical issue in


these secretive diseases.(Franklin 12)


Mastering these disorders does not occur easily or quickly. The disease must


be recognized first before it can be treated. This can be the most difficult


part of the recovery process.(Hax 94) However, after the disease is affirmed,


doctors can correct the physical and mental problems that can result in death if


untreated. It is important to understand the causes, effects, and treatments of


eating disorders so they can be dealt with in society today.


Deitel, Bob. ?Teens and Eating Disorders.? Washington Post.


January 16, 1994. C5.


Epstein, Rachel. Eating Habits and Disorders. New York:


Chelsea House Publishers, 1990.


Franklin, Melanie. ?My Daughter was an Anorexic.? Good


Housekeeping. August 13, 1998, p 12.


Hax, Carolyn. ?Food Without Tears.? Newsweek. July 9, 1997. pp


93-95.


Matthews, John R. Eating Disorders. New York: Facts on File,


1991.


Nadelson, Carol. Anorexia Nervosa. New York: Chelsea House,


1999.


?The Other Eating Disorder.? Sun-Sentinel. June 7, 1991. 1A.


White, William. Bulimiarexia. New York: Norton Company, 1983.

Сохранить в соц. сетях:
Обсуждение:
comments powered by Disqus

Название реферата: Eating Disorders Essay Research Paper Eating DisordersNicole

Слов:1124
Символов:7836
Размер:15.30 Кб.