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Bulimia Nervosa. James Bruce Per. 2. Defining What We Know As Bulimia. Bulimia is an eating disorder where one has episodes of consuming a large amount of food that carry high calories. These actions are followed by vomiting, the use of laxatives, fasting and excessive exercising.
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Bulimia Nervosa James Bruce Per. 2
Defining What We Know As Bulimia • Bulimia is an eating disorder where one has episodes of consuming a large amount of food that carry high calories. These actions are followed by vomiting, the use of laxatives, fasting and excessive exercising.
Associated Features Actions Thoughts & Feelings • Regurgitating and then rechewing their food. • They find themselves binging and purging. • The use of drugs like enemas that is injected into the rectum. • Over using saunas to loose weight. • People with this disorder are very pessimistic and sees things as too big or too small. • They are overwhelmed and terrified about things that are going on in their life. • These people are totally out of control and helpless and is aware of that.
Diagnostic Criteria from DSM IV-TR • Eating a large amount of food in a discrete period of time like two hours. • Knowing that you have no self control during such actions like eating a vast amount of food. • Uncontrollable amount of self evaluation. • Looking for ways to prevent weight gain whether it means doing drugs, fasting, using laxatives, or excessive exercising. • It is average that the person may binge twice a week for three whole months.
Etiology • In most cases, bulimia is seen as contagious after seeing friends and family do it, you perform the same behavior. • When one voice isn't heard, their mind is thinking so much that their thoughts become their actions and so they feel they will receive attention by doing such behavior.
Prevalence • This disorder is most common to happen to women in their late teens or early twenties. • The impact this disorder has on the worlds population is 1%-4% and isn't easily seen by one’s environment. • It has been shown that since what causes this disorder happens in their childhood, 1%-3% of middle and high school students has bulimia while 4% of college women are diagnosed with this.
Treatment • The best way to approach this disorder is by seeing a physician as soon as possible. • After you have seen what's going on with your body, you should see a therapist so that they can see what's going on with you mentally and look into your thoughts. • With this, you develop a comfortable relationship with the therapist and your more open to seeing harm that you’ve brought to your surroundings. • Antidepressants are also used to treat bulimia nervosa and 1/3 of them that take it recover but therapy is seen as a better approach.
Prognosis Outcomes • During the period of time your having these issues, your teeth begin to fall out because of all the acid that’s in your mouth when you throw up. • You soon become to be emotionally unstable because of all the emotions you go through.
Prognosis Recovery • 74% of the people that attempt to make a recovery from this disorder makes full recovery opposed to anorexia making a 33% recovery rate. • The remainder of the people that attempt to recover makes up a 99% partial recovery rate.
References: APA Style • Bulimia Treatment.(2001) What is Bulimia Nervosa? America Journal of Psychiatry. Retrieved from (bulimia-treatment.net) • Orliss, M.(1998). Bulimia Nervosa. Retrieved from (education.ucsb.edu/jimerson/bulimia.html#buli mia%20etiology) • Growth Center.(2006). How Common Is Bulimia Nervosa. The Center For Growth. Retrieved from (therapyinphiladelphia.com/selfhelp/tips/how_common_is_bulimia_nervosa/) • Myers, D.G.(2011). Myers’ Psychology For A.P. New York: Worth Publishers • Hall, L., & Cohn, Leigh.(2010). What Thoughts and Feelings Are Associated With It? Retrieved from (bulimia.com/client/client_pages/bulimia9.cfm
Discussion Question Argue and evaluate, whether one’s environment or a person’s thoughts has the most significant impact on causing disorders as such.