Eating Disorders: Who Is To Be Held Responsible?
Essay Preview: Eating Disorders: Who Is To Be Held Responsible?
Report this essay
Eating Disorders: Who is to be held responsible?
Abstract
Only a thin line separates “normal” dieting from an eating disorder. (Hesse-Biber, 1996) Unfortunately for young women in this day and age, social and economic factors pressure them to pursue the thinness ideal, even to the point of dangerous behavior. At one point in time, dieting would have been considered one of the ways to improve one’s health. Today’s society has been brainwashed to believe that in order to be healthy, one has to be painfully thin. This ideology has caused 7 million girls’ lives to be affected with eating disorders (Mooney, Knox, and Schacht, 2006).
Discussion
Defining Eating Disorders
“A man cannot be too serious about his eating, for food is the force that binds society together.” What Confucius could never have fathomed was that approximately 2500 years after his death, food would actually be the force that disrupts society beyond repair. Who would have ever thought that a simple, life-sustaining function like eating would, one day, turn into a life-threatening, suicide mission for young women and men? Eating disorders do not discriminate amongst who they attack. Man, woman, rich, poor, educated, uneducated, illiterate, Asian, Latino, African, Australian, European, American — every single community is affected by it, and more affected by it than we can ever imagine.
Eating disorder warning signs are when a person’s day to day activities are seriously affected by body image issues: When an individual looks at one’s self in the mirror and can only see themselves as physically unsatisfactory, as is in the case of anorexia nervosa and bulimia. Binge-eating disorder typically occurs not because the person is dissatisfied with the way they appear, but when they go through emotional duress and feel as if eating will make everything alright.
Anorexia nervosa: This is frequently referred to as simply anorexia. The word anorexia actually means “loss of appetite” but people suffering from anorexia (the disease) do not experience loss of appetite. They are still hungry, yet they refuse to eat because they think they are “fat”. They harbor an intense fear of putting on weight even if they are severely emaciated. They tend to go to extremes with clothing, either wearing very loose clothes or wearing very revealing clothes. They value themselves based only on how much they weigh. (Michel & Willard, 2003)
For women, menstrual cycles tend to either delay if they have not started, or cease if they have. If the monthly cycle does not start by the time the severe weight loss begins, the anorexic’s body will stop developing; physically she remains a pre-pubescent girl. (Silverstein, Silverstein and Silverstein, 1991) For men, the levels of testosterone tend to decrease dramatically. Anorexic people are typically 15% or more underweight. (Orr, 2007)
Anorexics tend to count calories like their lives depend on it. They weigh everything they eat or drink, and exercise excessively and compulsively. This compulsive exercising is often referred to by physicians as “anorexia athletica”, an activity disorder. Anorexia can lead to bulimia and bulimia can lead to anorexia typically within five years of the onset of the illness. (Orr, 2003)
Bulimia: The word bulimia means “having the appetite of an ox”. It is four to six times more common than anorexia. Bulimic people tend to overeat and then purge at least twice a week.
Purging is not only vomiting, but can also be characterized as the person taking diuretics, medication, laxatives or exercising. Signs of bulimia are when the person frequently eats a lot of food, very quickly, and in one sitting. The food is typically not cut into little pieces and often not even chewed, but swallowed as quickly as humanly possible. The person cannot stop themselves from eating and it becomes compulsive. They usually eat only when they are alone so as to avoid the “guilt, shame and disgust” they would feel if someone saw them eat. (Orr, 2003)
As opposed to with anorexia, a bulimic person often manages to stay within 5 to 10 pounds of normal weight. Also as opposed to with anorexics, bulimics are often very aware that they have a problem
Binge-eating Disorder: Binge-eating disorder is almost the same as bulimia, but the person in question does not purge what they eat. They often binge up until they are uncomfortably full or are interrupted in some way. The emotional changes associated with anorexia, bulimia and binge-eating disorder are the same; the most common one being depression. (Michel and Willard, 2003)
Physical Effects of Anorexia
When a body loses enough weight by not getting sufficient nutrients, it starts eating itself. Gruesome, but this is what starving to death is all about. In anorexics, once all the fat is burned, the body starts burning muscle tissue, and then if it still does not get the nutrients it needs then it will also start feeding on its own organs. Unfortunately, this damage is irreversible. The person’s core body temperature also drops because a starving body cannot maintain a normal temperature. The person feels very cold, even if they are wearing sweaters or blankets. Their body even grows an extra layer of hair known as “lanugo” — a feeble attempt to get warmer. Anorexics’ bones tend to lose calcium and get brittle. The chances of osteoporosis are greatly increased. The intestines slow down as there is so little food and fiber going through. Nausea is very common. The person also develops anemia as the iron levels in the body drop. Fainting and dizziness are common in this situation.
As if that was not worrisome enough, the internal organs, including the heart and brain start to shrink. When the brain shrinks, it becomes harder to concentrate and comprehend. The walls in the heart get thinner, blood pressure drops, heartbeat becomes irregular and blood circulation is inhibited. Because of the decrease in pumping of the heart, fluid can begin to collect in the lungs. The kidneys also begin to malfunction. The person’s skin could become dry, pale, yellow, or cracked; joints can become sore and painful, sleep becomes irregular, and the immune system is greatly compromised.
(Orr, 2003)