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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 20 page paper discussing the conditions of anorexia and bulimia from many different aspects. Anorexia and bulimia are the most widely recognized of the eating disorders that many girls and young women experience in America today. There are many psychiatric and psychological reasons behind these problems and a large portion of this paper is devoted to a literature review which examines the many theories prevalent today. The final analysis is that these are conditions which vary considerably, and while they are essentially both mental and emotional problems, they also bring unique causes with each new case. Bibliography lists 25 sources.
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20 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_Anorbuli.doc
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many forms of food addiction which is classified as "an eating disorder where a person loses control over what and when to eat" (Gionta, 1995; p. 52). Quite often it
is associated with many emotional and psychological problems as it seems to force people to eat uncontrollably in an attempt, consciously and subconsciously, to hide the underlying problems. In the
end, however, the individual ends up feeling an overwhelming sense of self-hatred. The various causes behind these disorders are incredibly numerous, often pointing to the fact that there is no
one single reason behind the debilitating addiction. There is little doubt that the problems are both psychiatric and psychological, but the essential root of the problem is highly evasive.
Literature Review Anorexia Nervosa The condition known as anorexia nervosa normally appears in early or middle adolescence and is usually experienced by females. (The few boys or men who
are recorded to suffer from this tend to show evidence of homosexuality and/or concerns about their sexual identity). Pryor and Wiederman (1998) state "females may experience particular stressors that are
less often experienced by males. For example, during adolescence females are more likely than males to experience depression, perhaps because self-esteem is more related to weight and body shape for
females than it is for males" (p. 291). With anorexia or bulimia a girl, or young woman "begins to starve herself and sometimes exercise compulsively as well" (Anonymous Eating disorders
Part I, 1997; p. 1). In an anonymous article titled, "Diagnosing eating disorders: whats new in the DSM-IV" (1995), that authors claim that a "Disturbed body image is an essential
feature of all eating disorders but is most severe in anorexia" (p. 93). The weight of the individual falls and the health also deteriorates yet she may still feel that
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