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This 8 page paper discusses anorexia: what it is, who is at risk for developing it, and what treatments are available. Bibliography lists 7 sources.
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8 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_HVreanrx.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
anorexia nervosa as its properly known, is an eating disorder. "Eating disorders are conditions in which there is a serious disturbance in the way a person deals with food, weight,
and body image" (What is anorexia nervosa?, 2005).But it is also defined as a mental illness. More specifically, "[A]norexia nervosa is a serious, occasionally chronic, and potentially life-threatening eating disorder
defined by a refusal to maintain minimal body weight within 15 percent of an individuals normal weight" (About mental illness, 2009). Other "essential features" that help to define anorexia are
a "distorted body image," an "intense fear of gaining weight," refusal to admit the seriousness of the disease, and amenorrhea-missing three periods in a row (About mental illness, 2009). Anorexia
has two "subtypes," restricting and binge eating/purging (About mental illness, 2009). Those people who have the restricting subtype lose weight and maintain an abnormally low body weight "purely by restricting
their food intake and, possibly, by excessive exercise" (About mental illness, 2009). Those who have the binge/purge subtype also tend to restrict their food intake severely, but they also "regularly
engage in binge eating and/or purging behaviors such as self-induced vomiting or the misuse of laxatives, diuretics, or enemas" (About mental illness, 2009). It is not unusual for anorexics to
move from one behavior to the other and back again, several times during their illness (About mental illness, 2009). The effects of anorexia can be extremely serious: in some
cases, the behavior, which amounts to starving oneself to lose weight, can result in death (About mental illness, 2009). Other severe health problems can develop as a result of this
extreme behavior. They include such serious health threats as anemia, heart problems including "mitral valve prolapse, abnormal heart rhythms and heart failure" and bone loss, which increases the chances of
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