Eating Disorders

Eating disorders are serious and dangerous mental and physical disorders. They do not discriminate, affecting all individuals despite gender, race, age, body size, sexual orientation, and religion. The good news is, they are treatable! Let’s take a closer look at four of the most common eating disorders.

source: National Eating Disorder Association

  • This disorder is characterized by weight loss, a distorted body image, and an intense fear of gaining weight. Individuals with anorexia restrict their calorie intake, have rigid rules around food and eating, compulsively exercise, use laxatives, and/or purge. Oftentimes, the individual is preoccupied with food and body, which leads to isolation, avoidance of meal times, baggy clothes, and withdrawal from pleasurable activities. Physical signs may include fainting, difficulty sleeping, feeling cold all the time, stomach cramps, and trouble concentrating.

  • Bulimia is characterized by a cycle of binging and purging. The individual may also use laxatives, diuretics, or excessive exercise and have periods of fasting to compensate for binge episodes. Signs include the disappearance of large amounts of food in a short amount of time, frequent trips to the bathroom (especially after meals), skipping meals, fear of eating in public, stained teeth, wearing baggy clothes, frequently on a diet, and extreme mood swings. Physical symptoms include fluctuation in weight and muscle weakness, although they may appear at a “normal” weight. Additionally, they often engage in self-harm, substance use, and other impulsive behaviors.

  • Orthorexia is defined by an obsession with “healthy living.” This fixation on health is characterized by the compulsive checking of ingredients and calorie content of food, the elimination of certain food groups completely (like sugar, carbohydrates, and gluten), and the inability to eat anything labeled as “unhealthy” as well as high levels of distress when safe foods are not available and an obsession with a healthy lifestyle. Long term, this condition can lead to cardiac and gastrointestinal issues.

  • Binge eating disorder (BED) is characterized by recurrent consumption of large quantities of food, a sense of control loss, intense experiences of shame and guilt, and a lack of compensatory behaviors (like exercise, laxatives, and purging). Some warning signs include withdrawal from friends and pleasurable activities, frequent dieting, stealing/hoarding food, eating alone, fluctuations in weight, and low self-esteem.