Eating Disorders Are Not a “Female Problem
Most people would picture someone
with an eating disorder as a very thin — or very overweight — girl or
young woman, not as an athletic, muscular young male. Yet, though eating
disorders affect boys and men less often, they do strike them — and the
patient’s self-image as an athlete can be a factor. The results can be
just as devastating as they are for girls and women.
Let’s take a quick look at exactly what eating disorders are. The National Institute of Mental Health sums it
up: “An eating disorder is marked by extremes. It is present when a
person experiences severe disturbances in eating behavior, such as
extreme reduction of food intake or extreme overeating, or feelings of
extreme distress or concern about body weight or shape.”
The main types are anorexia (extreme desire to stay thin) and bulimia
(binge eating followed by attempts to make up for it, like induced
vomiting). The rest are known as EDNOS — eating disorders not otherwise
specified. These include binge eating disorder, in which the patient
doesn’t try to make up for binges, but feels excessively bad about them.
Eating disorders can be treated with psychotherapy, sometimes together
with medication. They often first show up during adolescence or early
adulthood. They may co-exist with other mental health problems, and the
patient’s abnormal eating can lead to severe physical problems.
Binge eating disorder is about as common in males as females, says
NIMH. One in four children with anorexia is a boy. Sadly, though they
show the same symptoms as girls, they’re less likely to have their
“stereotypically female” illness recognized and treated.
Maybe one reason for this is that males don’t necessarily want to
lose weight — they may want to gain weight, develop more muscle, or do
anything that will make them larger, to the point of using steroids.
They may have muscle dysmorphia, an obsession with being muscular,
commonly known as bigorexia. That nickname says it all — even in our
sedentary, information-based society, body size is important to a
male’s self-image.
Why? Well, we’ve known for a long time how impossibly perfect media
images of women affect girls’ body images. Now, maybe, the same thing is
happening to boys. A 1998 study measured male action figures from a
period of 30 years and concluded: “We found that the figures have grown
much more muscular over time, with many contemporary figures exceeding
the muscularity of even the largest human bodybuilders.”
Also troubling is NIMH’s recent finding that most teens with eating
disorders don’t get treatment for their particular condition.
It can be hard to recognize an eating disorder in a man or boy, and
it can be hard for them to admit to problems of this kind. But it’s
something parents, teachers, and society have to be ready to deal with.
Source : http://www.healtheagle.com/eating-disorders-are-not-a-female-problem/
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