We all want to look our best so paying attention to the number on the scale and temporarily
restricting
calories after a weekend of over eating-or dieting periodically— can be a
healthy way to control our weight. But for some women, counting calories and/or
exercising excessively is a dangerous obsession that puts their health at risk.
Read more>>
If your efforts to control what you
eat have gone to an extreme, it could be a sign of an eating disorder, says
psychologist Margo Maine, PhD, FAED, CEDS, author of The Body Myth.
Eating Disorders Don't Discriminate
by Age
Are You at Risk for Developing an
Eating Disorder?
Some women who get eating disorders
in middle age experienced the problem when they were younger and unfortunately
it never fully resolved. Others might have been on the fringe of an eating
disorder as a teenager but it never developed into a full-blown case. In either
scenario, one major trigger can be the transition through menopause, which
causes the metabolism to slow, hormones to shift, and other visible signs of
aging to increase.
Feeling overwhelmed by the multiple
demands of daily life in mid-age can also set off an eating disorder. "A
middle-age women isn't able to focus on herself the way a younger woman can.
She's usually juggling a job, a relationship, maybe kids and an extended
family, all of whom expect a lot from her," Maine says. All of these stresses can cause
her to feel out of control. One response may to exert control in areas she
can—what she eats and how much she exercises.
Why Eating Disorders Are Easy to
Miss in Adult Women
Maine says that in most women, an
eating disorder usually doesn't progress to the extreme but instead hovers on
the threshold (sometimes referred to as either "atypical ED" or
"near anorexia"), with the woman monitoring her food intake
intensively and using excessive exercise and/or other forms of purging to keep
her weight at the lowest end of the acceptable range. Although the situation
doesn't become as extreme as it might in a teenager, the behavior will still
have a clinical impact on the patient, putting her at risk for serious health
issues.
Since adult women with eating
disorders don't typically become as significantly underweight as a younger
person might, her family and friends often overlook the condition. In a culture
immersed in unrealistic ideals of healthy and beauty, Maine says that many primary care doctors
today even miss the signs of eating disorders in their middle-age patients.
This means that many women are left without access to beneficial treatment.
Signs of an Eating Disorder
So how do you know if you, or
someone you care about, could be experiencing any sort of eating disorder? Maine shares some of the
common signs that could indicate a problem:
Planning the whole day around food.
Eating in a ritualistic way.
Refusing to eat out in restaurants.
Exercising compulsively to burn off
calories.
Refusing to miss a workout even due
to injury or illness.
Eating different foods than she
feeds her family.
Being very judgmental about other
people's weight.
How to Help
The good news, though, is that with
the right support from a counselor and family, many women with eating disorders
do recover. For more information about eating disorders or to seek help for you
or someone you know, visit the National Eating Disorders...Visit here
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