Bulimia nervosa can affect women at any age, from the teens well into the middle age. However, white middle-class adolescents and women in their twenties with a strong orientation toward academic achievement and a traditional lifestyle, including marriage, are most vulnerable. Also research has claimed that 10 to 20 percent of female college students have practiced bulimic behavior sometime during their lives.
Bulimia can have devastating psychological and physical effects. In many instances, it can lead to low self-esteem, low frustration tolerance, and inability to express feelings and emotions. The obsession with food in some cases can set in motion addictive behaviors such as substance abuse and impulsive actions such as promiscuity, shoplifting, and overspending. In addition, the act of hiding food and purging in secrecy in effect leads to social isolation. Depression has also been linked to bulimic behavior, although studies show that only half the number of bulimics experience clinical depression and therefore it is unclear whether or not it is caused by bulimia or vice versa. In severe cases, because of extreme and excessive purging, dehydration and chemical imbalances can result, which in turn can lead to fatigue, seizures, irregular heartbeat, and brittle bones.
There are several therapeutic treatment options available to bulimics and they range from psychodynamic therapy to group therapy. Psychodynamic psychotherapy or psychoanalysis is usually utilized when traditional, individual psychotherapy fails. Psychoanalysis is rarely used because the program requires tremendous behavioral change and insight which, in most cases, does not help in treating the individual. Family therapy, a somewhat similar option, is a treatment which allows the patient to express family issues pertaining to inner problems, conflicts, and other expectations, which families create. Cognitive psychotherapy, a more relevant treatment, requires patients to maintain strict behavior and scheduled eating during the beginning phase.
According to Pompili, Girardi, Ruberto & Tatarelli (2006), "suicide in anoxeria nervosa and bulimia nervosa is a major cause of death" (p. 1). ... Suicide and Bulimia Nervosa The possibility of suicide among sufferers of bulimia nervosa is high given their mental and emotional instability. ... Etiology of Bulimia Nervosa According to Mayo Clinic (2012), there is no known exact cause of Bulimia Nervosa ("Cause"). ... Traumatic experience can also increase the chance for bulimia nervosa ("Risk Factors"). ... Treatments for Bulimia Nervosa A number of treatme...
Bulimia Nervosa Bulimia is characterized by alternating episodes of binge eating and purging. ... People with Bulimia can look perfectly normal. ... It is often difficult to determine whether a person is suffering from Bulimia Nervosa. ... Female athletes will bulimia nervosa are very similar to female non-athletes with that disorder, but there are some important additional factors at work also. ... Bulimia also affects the athlete physically. ...
Anorexia Nervosa vs. Bulimia Nervosa In today's society many people are affected by eating disorders and their deadly side effects. Two of the most common eating disorders, anorexia nervosa and bulimia nervosa, are often confused for one another because they each share many of the same qualities; however, each disorder has its own distinct behaviors that make it quite different from the other. ... Practices for victims of bulimia nervosa differ in that the victims will binge on incredibly large and abnormal quantities of food and then purge, which is often done by either inducing vo...
Bulimia is a growing problem in teenagers today. Bulimia nervosa is an eating disorder ,which experience of uncontrolled binge eating. ... Bulimia is a serious disease and it can turns into death. Bulimia is a growing problem in teenagers today. ... Bulimia is serious, "it kills." ...
Anorexia nervosa can result in significant and potentially life-threatening medical conditions. ... Individuals battling bulimia nervosa are usually within the normal or overweight range. ... Suicide risk is elevated with bulimia. ... Alcohol use and other substance use disorders can may be co-morbid with anorexia nervosa. ... Every five years, anorexia nervosa has increased by 36%, today 8 million women suffer from either anorexia or bulimia. ...
(Cooper, 65) Believe it or not two percent of the female population who are between the ages of 15 and 30 suffer from bulimia nervosa. If that wasn't an eye open, can you believe that of that number 15-20% of those women will loose their life to the preventable eating disorder bulimia nervosa, the silent killer. (http://www.netdoctor.co.uk/special_reports/) Bulimia nervosa is a psychological disease where the sufferer goes through stints of bingeing and purging. ... According to research bulimia and binge eating, if caught early can prevent long-term damages to ones body and if the media ...
I decided to focus on two eating disorders: bulimia nervosa and anorexia nervosa. ... Bulimia nervosa and anorexia nervosa are the two most widely recognized eating disorders. Bulimia usually begins in early adulthood and is most common in females. ... Symptoms of bulimia can include swelling of their cheeks or jaw, and calluses on the backs of their hands. Anorexia nervosa is characterized by a lack of appetite usually in young women. ...
Bulimia nervosa is an eating disorder represent by experience of uncontrolled binge eating. ... People with bulimia are obsessed with exercise to control weight. ... There are many physical signs of bulimia. ... Bulimia is a serious disease and it in many cases turns deadly. ... Bulimia is serious it kills. ...