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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 6 page paper provides an overview of the three primary eating disorders, anorexia, bulimia and compulsive eating disorder. This paper provides an overview of each of these disorders and then considers both the cause and effect. This paper outlines the role that society plays in defining gender expectations and the best approach to addressing the needs of a person with one or more of these disorders. Bibliography lists 5 sources.
Page Count:
6 pages (~225 words per page)
File: MH11_MHeatdi3.doc
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
support personnel who have had to reflect upon the variations in eating disorders in determining treatment options. Eating disorders are difficult to treat, especially because many of the
people suffering from them lack the capacity to understand the grave nature of the effects, but most theorists agree that anorexia nervosa, one of the most serious eating disorders, brings
with it a level of physiological, psychological and psychosocial suffering that shapes the view of the individual. Many of these individuals have been living with the issues and elements
of eating disorders for a large percentage of their lives, and while it has readily been recognized that early detection and treatment of these disorders is the best way to
end the chronic and often debilitating problems that these disorders bring, it is clear that many people chose not to be treated, and instead choose suffering over recovery. Anorexia
nervosa and bulimia have been recognized as the two most problematic of the major forms of eating disorders, and along with compulsive eating disorders, comprise the central triad of disorders
that fall under the category of "eating disorders." Anorexia and bulimia have been viewed as the most problematic, based on the lasting impacts and the fact that these disorders reflects
of level of severity that is definably correlated to perceptions of the long-term physical impacts. Starvation and self-imposed dieting, as well as binge eating, all elements that are inherent
in eating disorders, can manifest themselves in specific psychological characteristics, including obsession with food, preoccupation with eating and eating limitations, an increased emotional responsiveness and dysphoria, and overall distractibility (Polivy,
1996). If eating disorders go untreated for significant amounts of time, they can result in irreversible physical and psychological changes that can eventually lead to debilitating health conditions and
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