Eating Disorders Flashcards

1
Q

3 main categories of eating disorders

A
  • Anorexia: Inability to maintain body weight at or above a minimally normal weight for age and height with an intense fear of gaining weight or becoming fat, even though underweight
  • Bulimia: Recurrent episodes of binge eating, accompanied by inappropriate compensatory behaviour in order to prevent weight gain, such as self-induced vomiting, use of laxatives, excessive exercise, etc.
  • Binge-Eating Disorder: Binge eating without compensatory behaviours (ie. Vomiting, exercise, etc.); individuals often obese
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2
Q

Gender Differences in Body Image

A
  • As girls age, proportion of them who feel they are too fat increases, and so does percentage of them who diet
  • As boys age, proportion of them who feel they are too thin increases
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3
Q

Anorexia Nervosa vs. Anorexia

A
  • Anorexia Nervosa: nervous loss of appetite -> Psychological component
  • Anorexia: loss of appetite (no psychological component)
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4
Q

Anorexia Nervosa is characterized by

A
  • Intense fear of becoming fat or obese
  • Distorted body image
  • Refusal to maintain minimal body weight
  • Cessation of menstruation
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5
Q

Anorexia Nervosa

A
  • Pattern of self-starvation
  • More common among affluent, well-educated adolescent girls from affluent countries
  • Highest onset between ages 14-18, 8-11x more common amongst females
  • Supposedly on the rise
  • Can be lethal; causes physical problems
  • Central features:
    • Drive for thinness
    • Preoccupation with food
    • Cognitive/perceptual changes (ie. Changes in body perception)
  • Personality:
    • Obsessional, perfectionistic, heightened need for control
    • “prickly” -> not warm & fuzzy
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6
Q

Physical Problems Caused by Anorexia Nervosa

A
  • Hypothermia (low internal heat)
  • Low blood pressure
  • Reduced bone density
  • Amenorrhea
  • Electrolyte imbalances
  • Cardiac problems
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7
Q

PDM: Eating Disorders

A
  • Affective: depressive symptoms, anxiety symptoms, emotional concerns (e.g., feelings of being starved for care and affection)
  • Cognitive Patterns: a preoccupation with being inadequate, incompetent, unloved; a focus on being young, “little”, un-grownup, and innocent; desire to remain a child
  • Somatic States: a sense of “numbness”; confusion about bodily sensations; physical emptiness in the stomach associated with the sense of an empty self
  • Relationship Patterns: issues of control and perfectionism; keep their problem secret, relate to others superficially; handle fears of feelings unloved by compliance
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8
Q

Hewitt’s Study: What do we know about anorexia nervosa deaths?

A
  • Life-threatening: 25-50% die
  • Predominantly in women (90%)
  • Predominantly in young women
  • It was previously said that chronicity of disorder (if you’ve had it for a long time) is predictor of death
  • Method:
    • Looked at US death record stats from 80’s-90’s -> 10.6m participant
    • Death records listed primary cause and contributing causes of death -> selected participants with anorexia nervous as primary or contributing cause of death
  • Results:
    • 724 people had AN listed as primary or contributing cause; predominantly female
    • Largest death spikes happen around age 39 and age 89
    • Replication: data from BC and Norway supported that average age of death is 60-80
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