• Only 1 in 10 men and women with eating disorders receive treatment.
• Only 35% of people that receive treatment for eating disorders get treatment at a specialized facility for eating disorders.
• Up to 30 million people of all ages and genders suffer from an eating disorder (anorexia, bulimia and binge eating disorder) in the U.S.
• Eating disorders have the highest mortality rate of any mental illness.
• Women are much more likely than men to develop …show more content…
People with bulimia may secretly binge — eating large amounts of food — and then purge, trying to get rid of the extra calories in an unhealthy way.” According to the Mayo Clinic (2015), bulimia has two categories: purging bulimia and non-purging bulimia. A person with purging bulimia regularly vomits, uses laxatives, diuretics, or enemas after binge eating. A person with non-purging bulimia you use other methods such as fasting, excessive exercise, and strict dieting to lose the weight you would gained from your binge. I found the criteria for bulimia nervosa from DSM-5 on The Alliance for Eating Disorders Awareness (2013) website. Bulimia Nervosa is characterized …show more content…
The Mayo Clinic Staff (April 29, 2015) posted the risk factors. Risk factors include; sex, being female puts you at higher risk of developing bulimia nervosa. Next risk factor is age, bulimia nervosa most often begins in the teenage years. Another factor is your biology, people with first degree relatives that have an eating disorder, are more likely to have an eating disorder. The next three factors go together. Media and societal pressure, psychological and emotional issues, and sports, work or artistic pressures. In today’s world, young ladies look up to models and actresses that portray unrealistic body proportions. Not only do young ladies have unrealistic body goals, they will go to any length to lose that extra pound or run the extra mile. Another factor that has come to the surface in more recent years is bullying. I knew as a young athletically built girl that I was never going to be built the same way as my sister or some of my friends. Luckily, I had a family that supported me. A lot of young ladies don’t have that type of support. Either you’re bullied for weighing too much or girls who are at average weight think negatively about their bodies compared to the bodies of women in