Eating Disorders
Title: Eating Disorders
Category: /Science & Technology
Details: Words: 1660 | Pages: 6 (approximately 235 words/page)
Eating Disorders
Category: /Science & Technology
Details: Words: 1660 | Pages: 6 (approximately 235 words/page)
Eating Disorders
Each year millions of people in the United States are affected by serious and sometimes life-threatening eating disorders. The vast majority are adolescents and young adult women. Approximately one percent of adolescent girls develop anorexia nervosa, a dangerous condition in which they can literally starve themselves to death. Another two to three percent develop bulimia nervosa, a destructive pattern of excessive overeating followed by vomiting or other " purging " behaviors to control their weight.
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Determinations of Adolescent Obesity: A Comparison with Anorexia Nervosa. Adolescence, 89, 155-167
Holaday, M., Smith E. K., Robertson, S. & Dallas, J. (1994). An Atypical Eating Disorder With Crohn’s Disease in a Fifteen-Year-Old-Male: A Case Study. Adolescence, 116, 865-873
Kagan, M. D. & Squires, L. R. (1984). Eating Disorders Among Adolescents: Patterns And Prevalence. Adolescence, 73, 15-31
Nagel, L. K. & Jones, H. K. (1992). Sociological Factors in the Development of Eating Disorders. Adolescence, 105, 107-113
Romeo, F. (1994). Adolescent Boys and Anorexia Nervosa. Adolescence, 115,


