How Many Children Have Eating Disorders?
HealthyPlace.com Video
The Causes and Effects of Eating Disorders
Today's
mainstream culture projects a narrow view of beauty for
women. Attempting to attain this level of "perfection" can
have unhealthy consequences. Joyce A. Adams, M.D. and Trish
Stanley, PsyD, MFT discuss the cause, effect and treatment
of eating disorders in adolescent women.
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Research suggests that about one percent (1%) of female adolescents have
anorexia. That means that about one out of every one hundred young women
between ten and twenty are starving themselves, sometimes to death. There do
not seem to be reliable figures for younger children and older adults, but
such cases, while they do occur, are not common.
Research suggests that about four percent (4%), or four
out of one hundred, college-aged women have bulimia. About 50% of people who
have been anorexic develop bulimia or bulimic patterns. Because people with
bulimia are secretive, it is difficult to know how many older people are
affected. Bulimia is rare in children.
Only about 10% of people with anorexia and
bulimia are male. This gender difference may reflect our society's different
expectations for men and women. Men are supposed to be strong and powerful.
They feel ashamed of skinny bodies and want to be big and powerful. Women,
on the other hand, are supposed to be tiny, waif-like, and thin. They diet
to lose weight, making themselves vulnerable to binge eating. Some develop
rigid and compulsive overcontrol. Dieting and the resulting hunger are two
of the most powerful eating disorders triggers known.
HealthyPlace.com Audio

Anorexia:
A Boy's Story
George is
15 and has suffered with anorexia for nearly a year. As
anorexia in boys is less common, his doctor thought he had
cancer.
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Anorexia and bulimia affect primarily
people in their teens and twenties, but studies report both disorders in
children as young as six and
individuals as old as seventy-six.
Studies suggest that about sixty percent of adult
Americans, both male and female, are overweight. About one third (34%) are
obese, meaning that they are 20% or more above normal, healthy weight. Many
of these people have binge eating disorder.
In addition, about 31 percent of American teenage girls and 28 percent of
boys are somewhat overweight. An additional 15 percent of American teen
girls and nearly 14 percent of teen boys are obese. (Archives of Pediatrics
and Adolescent Medicine, January 2004) Causes include fast food, snacks with
high sugar and fat content, use of automobiles, increased time spent in
front of TV sets and computers, and a generally more sedentary lifestyles
than slimmer peers.
A recent study reported in Drugs and Therapy
Perspectives reports that about one percent of women in the United States
have binge eating disorder, as do thirty percent of women who seek treatment
to lose weight. In other studies, up to two percent, or one to two million
adults in the U.S., have problems with binge eating.
About 72% of alcoholic women younger
than 30 also have eating disorders. (Health magazine, Jan/Feb 2002)
Because anorexia athletica is not a
formal diagnosis, it has not been studied as rigorously as the official
eating disorders. We have no idea how many people exercise compulsively.
HealthyPlace.com Audio
Body
Dysmorphic Disorder
Britney
would spend hours every night obsessing over her face,
wondering what she could do to change it and make it
"acceptable". "I'd become suicidal over my appearance,
feeling that I was so disgusting, hideously ugly, that I
didn't deserve to live. I thought that those around me
shouldn't have to suffer by being with me." She shares her
life with BDD and our psychiatrist, Dr. Spratley, discusses
what the treatment for Body Dsymorphic Disorder entails.
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Not yet an
official diagnosis, but may achieve that status soon. BDD affects about two
percent of people in the U.S. and strikes males and females equally, usually
before age eighteen (70% of the time). Sufferers are excessively concerned
about appearance, body shape, body size, weight, perceived lack of muscles,
facial blemishes, and so forth. In some cases BDD can lead to steroid abuse,
unnecessary plastic surgery, and even suicide. BDD is treatable and begins
with an evaluation by a mental health care provider.
Subclinical eating disorders
We can only guess at the vast numbers of
people who have subclinical or threshold eating disorders. They are too
much preoccupied with food and weight. Their eating and weight control
behaviors are not normal, but they are not disturbed enough to qualify for a
formal diagnosis.
Eating disorders in Western and non-Western countries
In a study reported
in Medscape's General Medicine 6(3) 2004, prevalence rates in Western
countries for anorexia nervosa ranged from 0.1% to 5.7% in female subjects.
Prevalence rates for bulimia nervosa ranged from 0% to 2.1% in males and
from 0.3% to 7.3% in female subjects.
Prevalence rates in non-Western countries for bulimia nervosa ranged from
0.46% to 3.2% in female subjects. Studies of eating attitudes indicate
abnormal eating attitudes in non-Western countries have been gradually
increasing, presumably because of the influence, at least in part, of
Western media: movies, TV shows, and magazines. Researchers conclude that
the prevalence of eating disorders in non-Western countries is lower than
that of Western countries, but it appears to be increasing.
Mortality and recovery rates
Without treatment, up to twenty percent
(20%) of people with serious eating disorders die. With treatment, that
number falls to two to three percent (2-3%).
With treatment, about sixty percent (60%) of people with eating disorders
recover. They maintain healthy weight. They eat a varied diet of normal
foods and do not choose exclusively low-cal and non-fat items. They
participate in friendships and romantic relationships. They create families
and careers. Many say they feel they are stronger people and more insightful
about life in general and themselves in particular than they would have been
without the disorder.
In spite of treatment, about twenty percent (20%) of people with eating
disorders make only partial recoveries. They remain too much focused on food
and weight. They participate only peripherally in friendships and romantic
relationships. They may hold jobs but seldom have meaningful careers. Much
of each paycheck goes to diet books, laxatives, jazzercise classes, and
binge food.
The remaining twenty percent (20%) do not improve, even with treatment.
They are seen repeatedly in emergency rooms, eating disorders programs, and
mental health clinics. Their quietly desperate lives revolve around food and
weight concerns, spiraling down into depression, loneliness, and feelings of
helplessness and hopelessness.
Please note: The study of eating disorders is a relatively new field. We
have no good information on the long-term recovery process. We do know that
recovery usually takes a long time, perhaps on average three to five years
of slow progress that includes starts, stops, slides backwards, and
ultimately, movement in the direction of mental and physical health.
If you believe you are in the forty percent of people who do not recover
from eating disorders, give yourself a break. Get into treatment and stay
there. Give it all you have. You may surprise yourself and find you are in
the sixty percent after all.
Miscellaneous statistics
From England: A 1998 survey done by Exeter
University included 37,500 young women between twelve and fifteen. Over half
(57.5%) listed appearance as the biggest concern in their lives. The same
study indicated that 59% of the twelve and thirteen-year-old girls who
suffered from low self-esteem were also dieting.
Dieting teens: More than half of teenaged girls are, or think they should
be, on diets. They want to lose all or some of the forty pounds that females
naturally gain between 8 and 14. About three percent of these teens go too
far, becoming anorexic or bulimic.
Unrealistic expectations: Magazine pictures are electronically edited and
airbrushed. Many
entertainment celebrities are underweight, some anorexically so. How do we know what we should look like? It's hard. The
table below compares average women in the U. S. with Barbie Doll and
department store mannequins. It's not encouraging. (Health magazine,
September 1997; and NEDIC, a Canadian eating disorders advocacy group)
| |
Average
woman
|
Barbie |
Store
mannequin |
| Height |
5' 4"
|
6' 0"
|
6' 0"
|
| Weight |
145
lbs. |
101
lbs |
Not available
|
| Dress size |
11 -14
|
4
|
6
|
| Bust |
36 -
37" |
39"
|
34"
|
| Waist |
29 -
31" |
19"
|
23"
|
| Hips |
40 -
42" |
33"
|
34"
|
Determining accurate statistics is difficult.
Because physicians are not
required to report eating disorders to a health agency, and because people
with these problems tend to be secretive, denying that they even have a
disorder, we have no way of knowing exactly how many people in this country
are affected.
We can study small groups of people, determine how many of them are
eating disordered, and then extrapolate to the general population. The
numbers are usually given as percentages, and they are as close as we can
get to an accurate estimate of the total number of people affected by eating
disorders.
Now, that having been said, the journal Clinician Reviews [13(9]) 2003]
estimates that each year about five million Americans are affected by an
eating disorder. But there is disagreement.
The National Association of Anorexia Nervosa and Associated Disorders
states that approximately eight million people in the U.S. have anorexia
nervosa, bulimia, and related eating disorders. Eight million people
represents about three percent (3%) of the total population. Put another
way, according to ANAD, about three out of every one hundred people in this
country eats in a way disordered enough to warrant treatment. If you want to
know how they arrived at this number, e-mail their staff.
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